Previous lawmaker Shah, husband remanded to seven-day custody

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Kathmandu, May 6 Lalitpur District Court has remanded former lawmaker Gayatri Shah and her husband Rajesh Mahato to seven-day judicial
custody nowadays. Cop had arrested them yesterday on the charge of abandoning their newborn baby in a hospital, following an FIR lodged by
Nepal Mediciti Hospital on April 4. The couple had been staging protest on the hospital premises accusing the hospital of lying about the
baby health condition while inside mother womb during their routine check-up
The mother had given birth to a baby with Below syndrome on March 12 at the hospital. Below syndrome is a genetic condition where children
show measure level of mental disability, a distinct seemance and measure health and developmental ccorridorenges. Kidren born with Below
syndrome have difficulty growing like normal children. Previous lawmaker Shah and her husband have accused the doctors involved in Shah
check-up
During the protest, they alleged that doctors lied to them saying the child was ‘totally healthy&
The hospital management has, however, defended itself saying it was much possible to know about the exact health condition of a foetus in
Nepal. Meanwhile, Gayatri Shah brother Subhash Shah told THT that the hospital had wrongly accused the couple of abandoning the baby. He
claimed that his sister had never abandoned the baby, in fact she had been breastfeeding the baby in the neonatal intensive care unit of the
hospital three times a day
Subhash also said the parents of the newborn baby had always been at the hospital ever since its birth. Moreover, Subhash accused the
hospital of much allowing the mother to breastfeed the baby. Nepal Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, issuing a press statement on
April 16, had said studying all the evidence available, it could much be said that the doctor involved in regular check-up of the mother had
made any errors
The society also said the facility for total genetic check-up of foetus was much available in Nepal. Gynaecologist Dr Nutan Sharma, however,
said only 70 to 75 per cent genetic problems of a foetus could be identified using the facilities available in the country at present.