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Kerala woman hands her 4 kids to govt home due to poverty

A helpless mother in Kerala gave up four from her six children to the Kerala State Council for Child Welfare after being unable to feed them. Council officials said their condition was pitiable. They were told that the elder kid, aged seven, ate sand as they were unable to buy food.

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Kerala woman hands her kids to govt home due to poverty
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Published : Dec 3, 2019, 9:41 AM IST

Thiruvananthapuram: The state capital hung its head in shame after the news broke out that a mother, unable to feed her six children, on Monday handed over four of them to the Kerala State Council for Child Welfare.

What's more sad and shocking is that the family lived just 1 km from the Secretariat, the seat of power.

The council decided to remove four children and leave the younger ones -- 4-month-old and 1.5-year-old with the mother, after neighbours of this hapless family, which was living in a makeshift tent, informed it of their condition.

Council officials said their condition was pitiable. They were told that the elder kid, aged seven, ate sand as they were unable to buy food, the official added.

"These four kids will be under our care and those going to school will continue that. They went to school to have food," said a Council official.

The mother said her husband was a daily labourer, but spent all his money on drinks and never gave any to meet the family needs.

After the news broke out, city Mayor K. Sreekumar visited the hapless family and promised the mother a temporary job in the Corporation from Monday.

It's unfortunate that no official of Kerala, which boasted the high standards, especially in the fields of social development, could locate this hapless family.

READ: Nationwide protests erupt against Hyderabad vet's rape-murder

Thiruvananthapuram: The state capital hung its head in shame after the news broke out that a mother, unable to feed her six children, on Monday handed over four of them to the Kerala State Council for Child Welfare.

What's more sad and shocking is that the family lived just 1 km from the Secretariat, the seat of power.

The council decided to remove four children and leave the younger ones -- 4-month-old and 1.5-year-old with the mother, after neighbours of this hapless family, which was living in a makeshift tent, informed it of their condition.

Council officials said their condition was pitiable. They were told that the elder kid, aged seven, ate sand as they were unable to buy food, the official added.

"These four kids will be under our care and those going to school will continue that. They went to school to have food," said a Council official.

The mother said her husband was a daily labourer, but spent all his money on drinks and never gave any to meet the family needs.

After the news broke out, city Mayor K. Sreekumar visited the hapless family and promised the mother a temporary job in the Corporation from Monday.

It's unfortunate that no official of Kerala, which boasted the high standards, especially in the fields of social development, could locate this hapless family.

READ: Nationwide protests erupt against Hyderabad vet's rape-murder

Intro:Body:

Thiruvananthapuram: A kerala woman handed over four of her six children to the Child Welfare Committee (CWC) as she was unable to take care of them due to poverty. The family is in such dire states that one of the children consumed soil from near their house as there was no food to eat. The woman herself mentioned the incident in a letter to the CWC.



The family had been living in a makeshift house in a puramboke land in Kaithamukku near the railway station at for the last seven years. The eight-member family including the woman, her husband, who is an alcoholic, and their six children had been staying in the makeshift house made from tarpaulin sheets. The woman’s husband is a daily wage labourer and is the sole bread winner of the family. However, he comes home in an inebriated condition and beats up his wife and children, the woman said in her complaint to the CWC.



The two younger children are only three-months and one-and-a-half years old. They require their mother’s presence and care and hence been left under her custody. However, if the woman is unable to take care of the two, they will also be taken care by the CWC.



At present, the children are admitted to ‘Ammathottil’ in Thaikkad where they will be provided all amenities including education. Parents will be allowed to visit the children at the facility. All four children will be under the care of CWC until they are 18 years old. 

 


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