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Monday, June 16, 2014

Baby Dumping: Is There A Solution?

Co-Authored with Nur Faliqa, Nursabrina and Ayna Syaqiren

Adolescents are often associated with social problems and this has become an increasingly serious issue. Almost every day we can see the media reporting on issues involving youngsters, specifically adolescents on drug abuse, LGBT, illegal racing, snatch theft crime, gengsterisme, road bullies and runaways, reaching alarming levels.

In recent years, baby dumping has been one of the most shocking of these issues plaguing the country. Baby dumping involves the illegal discarding of infants ages less than 12 months old,  left in the open or in hidden places, with the intention to get rid of the baby regardless of the dangers on the baby’s life (Nazani, Zaherawati, Zaliha & Kamaruadin, 2012). An example of the worst kinds of dumping are when a girl would give birth in a school bathroom at night then throws the baby into the garbage or in the toilet bowl even a baby swaddled in newspapers left squalling by a fly-infested dustbin, as opposed to a baby left on the doorsteps of people’s home with notes or in a mosque.

This is an embarrassing, sad and worst reflection of our society today with statistics showing that these youngsters play a very worrying role in the rise of unwed pregnancies which usually leads to dumping. In January to April 2010, there were a reported number of over 111 unmarried young girls who were pregnant out of wedlock (Source: JKM). While the figures way seem in reasonable value, it should not be taken lightly as in all likelihood we may see a sharp increase of reported cases for the rest of the year. There are also the unreported cases which makes it harder to tabulate an exact amount of unwed pregnancies, making the exact numbers higher than any given statistics.

The key triggers for baby dumping are out of wedlock pregnancy coupled with an unforgiving society. In particular, when this happens to adolescent in school who are not mentally prepared to cognitively think of a better solution and may only react out of fear and panic, looking to dumping as the only solution that would help get their lives back to normal. This is in relation to the rise of early unsafe uneducated adolescent sexual practice in Malaysia, which prompts these pregnancies leading to baby dumping with statistics showing that in most developing countries the population are sexually active before they are 15 years of age (Dixon-Mueller, 2009).

Baby dumping is not the solution and is considered a crime under Section 317 of the Penal Code which carries a maximum jail term of seven years of fine or both according to the Malaysia law. For the past few years the alarming numbers of newborn babies found dead or live in the most unlikely places such as toilets and dumpsters have increased dramatically. As Malaysians gets desensitized by the violence against these children increases, so does it is reflected on how cases of it rises over time reaching intolerable levels, taking into question our own sense morality as a civilized society.

According to Utusan Malaysia, these inhuman activities ran rampant as it seems to happen almost every month, only a slight drop from last year which had monthly occurrences of it. On January 16, 2013 a fetus was found in a glass bottle near the lay stall by a cleaner in Kota Kinabalu, Sabah. Then, by 21st January, newborn baby was dumped into garbage bin in Hospital Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah, Temerloh, Pahang. This trend continued up till December. Is this the developed society that we wanted be? What goes to the mind of these killers? What prompted such cruelty to manifest among supposedly peace loving Malaysians? This is not an isolated problem this is the effects modern social values corrupting our sense of humanity.

There are various factors and reasons of increasing cases of baby dumping. This can be categorizing into three main components which is social, spiritual and globalization in developing technology (Prof Madya Dr Mohammad Shatar, 2010).  Social factors are the main point that leads to baby dumping. This includes unlimited socialization in life between men and women, where western portrayal of romance makes the culture of unsafe casual sexual practice the norm. Where the populace only takes in these portrayals without the benefit of solid sexual education that teaches them about safe sex through the use of condoms.

Religious education then plays an important role in shaping the minds of our young against the onslaught of westernized social thought, it allows them to have a strong moral compass and belief system where they can turn to for guidance and comfort. With it our youths can make better decision on what is good and bad for them and those around them.
In the globalization era, the proliferation of technologies through mobile phones and higher usage of the internet, has allowed unprecedented access to a myriad and dizzying volume of information and actives. Left unmonitored, our children may be exposed to immoral activities that they do not understand and may copy blandly.

Thus it is imperative that we keep a close eye on our kids, nurture them, teaching about good and bad, help and harm, let them understand intrinsically that sex comes with its own set of consequences and baby are not things to be thrown at a whim, they are people,

Adults play an integral role in this initiative, where through their guidance and good example that these young adolescent may learn of the immorality of the act. Cooperation of the authority, government and society as a whole also plays a crucial role towards achieving the target of eliminating social problems in a community. This might be seen as an insurmountable task, but something worthwhile is never easy.