Friday, 23 March 2012
Monday, 19 March 2012
Saturday, 17 March 2012
Father seeks justice under Protection and Welfare of Parents Act, 2007
Saurabh
Prashar, TNN | Mar 18, 2012, 05.20AM IST
CHANDIGARH: A 66-year-old Sudhir Singla
of Sector 37, who retired from Punjab
Irrigation Department seven years ago had spent his life's entire savings
on the education of his three children, is now a dumped father. He has knocked
the door of a local court of SDM seeking maintenance charges for his livelihood
under Protection and Welfare of Parents Act, 2007 from his elder son.
I had never thought that I will have to move court against my own blood, but the changed attitude of my three children forced me to take this step, Singla told TOI. He said, Situation became worse after my wifes death.
Singla is not the only senior citizen of Chandigarh, who approached the court of area sub-divisional magistrate (SDM). Around 25 elderly have moved different courts seeking maintenance charges from their children in last six months.
The plight of these people came to light during an awareness seminar on Protection and Welfare of Parents Act, 2007 at Government Museum and Arts Gallery, Sector 10, on Saturday. The seminar was organized by Chandigarh Senior Citizens Association (CSCA).
Om Parkash, 65, of Sector 27 also approached the SDM seeking maintenance charges from his two sons. For the past one-and-half years I was ignored by my family and was subjected to rude behaviour by both my sons and daughters-in-law, he rued. Parkash had shifted to Chandigarh after selling his five acre agriculture land in Gurdaspur district around 32 years ago and his two sons have established their own small-time businesses in the city.
SDM (south) Nidhi Srivastva, who was a member of panel, said, We have received 10 to 15 complaints by elderly people against their children. But the actual situation is worse as not many people move the court."
CSCA president Brig (retd) Keshav Chandra said, "Though senior citizen association is receiving a number of complaints from senior citizens highlighting harassment at hands of their children, majority of them refused to file complaint." Our motive was to encourage them to file complaints, he added.
I had never thought that I will have to move court against my own blood, but the changed attitude of my three children forced me to take this step, Singla told TOI. He said, Situation became worse after my wifes death.
Singla is not the only senior citizen of Chandigarh, who approached the court of area sub-divisional magistrate (SDM). Around 25 elderly have moved different courts seeking maintenance charges from their children in last six months.
The plight of these people came to light during an awareness seminar on Protection and Welfare of Parents Act, 2007 at Government Museum and Arts Gallery, Sector 10, on Saturday. The seminar was organized by Chandigarh Senior Citizens Association (CSCA).
Om Parkash, 65, of Sector 27 also approached the SDM seeking maintenance charges from his two sons. For the past one-and-half years I was ignored by my family and was subjected to rude behaviour by both my sons and daughters-in-law, he rued. Parkash had shifted to Chandigarh after selling his five acre agriculture land in Gurdaspur district around 32 years ago and his two sons have established their own small-time businesses in the city.
SDM (south) Nidhi Srivastva, who was a member of panel, said, We have received 10 to 15 complaints by elderly people against their children. But the actual situation is worse as not many people move the court."
CSCA president Brig (retd) Keshav Chandra said, "Though senior citizen association is receiving a number of complaints from senior citizens highlighting harassment at hands of their children, majority of them refused to file complaint." Our motive was to encourage them to file complaints, he added.
Post by: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/chandigarh/Father-seeks-justice-under-Protection-and-Welfare-of-Parents-Act-2007/articleshow/12312070.cms
Comments:
Whether Malaysian needs
this Law?
Thursday, 15 March 2012
Those poor abandoned babies
March 15, 2012 / Opinion
Post by:
http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/opinion/article/those-poor-abandoned-babies
MARCH 15 — My heart sinks
every time I read another story about a baby found abandoned somewhere in our
country. The details never seem to change — a newborn, found in a dumpster. Or
in the longkang. Barely alive. Dead. All abandoned, almost always at birth.
Something else never seems
to vary in these cases. The mother is usually young. Usually Malay. Always
unmarried. As for the father? Almost always absent.
As with the latest case. A
newborn baby’s body, found in a pail covered with a cloth. A 22-year-old
mother, already arrested. Father currently unknown.
These cases always bring
up feelings of revulsion against the mother. Pity for the poor, innocent baby
who ends up paying the price of its parents’ indiscretions. If the baby must be
abandoned, then why not leave it at a mosque? Somewhere safe, where it can be
found and tended?
I too share most of those
feelings. Why should the innocent baby have to suffer? Yet at the same time, I
pity the mother. Many people out there appear to think that mothers who abandon
their newborns are nothing short of monsters. Tak berhati perut.
Maybe so, but I also think
about the desperate young woman usually left to fend for herself. The young
woman who hides her condition for months, and then reaches the end of her
tether when faced with the very real consequence of her actions.
Many mothers will tell you
that giving birth can be a traumatic experience, even when you’ve got your
husband, doctors and nurses surrounding you. What must it be like for the young
unmarried mother who gives birth in secret all by herself?
Yet society continues to
censure such women. They deserve to be flogged. Hanging is too good for the
likes of them. They will burn in hell. And so on, ad nauseam.
Some think that these
problems will be solved if only we were more religious (let’s not forget that a
majority of these cases involve Malays). That may be true. If we were all
better Muslims then sex would only exist within the boundaries of marriage and
all children would be born within wedlock; ergo, baby abandonment cases would
not occur.
However, being a realist,
I know that this will never happen. Islam or not, we are all flawed humans and
there will always be people who have sex outside of marriage. The problem is
that this group of people often also includes those who are young or naive, or
who have no idea about the consequences of sex.
Last month, our government
decided to ban a children’s book about sex. What a pointless gesture. Sex
cannot be contained. Sex creates life. Our government — indeed, our society —
is not going to win any battle against an act that is, in fact, completely
natural.
That doesn’t mean that I
advocate free sex all around. Of course not. But we do need to be sensible
about sex. I firmly believe that our children need to be taught about sex — and
not just the mechanics of the act. Sex education is about health, both physical
and emotional.
Our children should learn
about the effects sex can have on their bodies — conception and diseases. Our
children should learn about self-esteem in relation to sex so that they do not
confuse sex with love. Our children should be told that sex can arouse
complicated feelings, and should learn how to deal with such things. Our
children need to be educated about sex, because, like it or not, religious or
not, some of them will experiment with sex at some point in their lives before
they get married.
I understand completely
that parents do not want that to happen. But be realistic. How many out there
can honestly say that they waited for marriage? Sex takes place all the time,
and if our children decide to experiment, wouldn’t we want them to do so with
knowledge instead of ignorance?
We teach our children road
safety awareness. We teach them how to count, how to read, how to write. We
teach our children to be wary of strangers. We teach our children all sorts of
things to make sure that they are ready for the world.
Yet as a nation and a
society we continually fail our children because we do not equip them with
vital knowledge about their own bodies. We leave our children to discover these
things for themselves, by themselves. Sometimes we’re lucky and nothing
untoward happens. Sometimes it ends with a baby; with shame and stigma for the
mother. Sometimes it ends with a dead baby and a mother with a destroyed life.
I cannot find it in me to
blame the mother when a baby is abandoned. Yes, it is a vile and shocking act;
abhorrent. Yes, becoming pregnant outside marriage is wrong in the eyes of so
many religions.
The more religious amongst
you will argue that sex education will encourage our youngsters to have even more
sex. I say, it’s happening anyway. Which is better: a teenager who understands
how her body works, or a 20-year-old who thinks you can’t get pregnant the
first time you have sex?
And before we all condemn
the mother in the latest case, think: if your unmarried daughter found herself
pregnant, would she tell you in the hope of getting some support, or would she
keep it a secret? If it happened to you, that answer could one day literally
mean life or death for one innocent baby.
* The views expressed here are
the personal opinion of the columnist.
Sunday, 4 March 2012
Elderly Parents Abandoned at Hospitals
Samir
Al-Saadi, Arab News
JEDDAH, 3 February 2005 —
Some elderly Saudis are being disposed of by their families who dump them off
in front of area hospitals and speed away, leaving doctors furious and
flabbergasted by this bizarre, cruel behavior.
Recently, three separate
families abandoned their parents — and their responsibilities — at King Fahd
Hospital.
In an incident at the
hospital on Tuesday, a woman in her late 80s who was abandoned by her son there
10 days earlier was reunited with him. During her hospital stay, officials tried
several times to get in touch with her family, who denied her existence.
Security guards were able
to trace her taxi-driver son who ditched her at the hospital.
He was recognized as a
regular visitor to the premises, frequently dropping off passengers at the
Intensive Care Unit (ICU) entrance.
The man arrived at the
hospital accompanied by his young son, and when confronted by hospital
officials he denied any relation to the old woman despite her enthusiastic
greetings.
“Waleed,” she cried.
“After checking the man’s
ID we established that, in fact, it was his name,” said the Dr. Abdul Malik
Al-Huti, head of the ICU.
If there was any doubt,
the little boy put it to rest.
“When we brought in the
young child accompanying his father, he took one look at her and said she was
his grandmother.”
After officials had a
long, generally unpleasant discussion with “Waleed,” he reclaimed his mom.
Not all of the elderly are
so lucky.
“Uncle Hamed,” as he’s
called at the hospital, was abandoned during Ramadan and still lies on a King
Fahd Hospital bed. He is blind, emaciated and 87 years old.
Officials have tried to
find a person to contact, but the man has no identification — and no one knows
who left him at the hospital.
“We found one number in
his pocket, which led us to an Arab neighbor who once cared for Hamed, but he
didn’t have the capability to care for him,” a hospital official said.
His neighbors said Ahmad
used to have a son living with him, but the man no longer lives in his house
and has not been seen for a while.
And then there’s the man
who checked in for a checkup who won’t check out.
Hamed Al-Kayyal, a Saudi
in his 50s, has been in the hospital for nearly two months for no medical
reason.
“He refuses to leave and
has caused us lots of problems,” said Dr. Al-Huti. “We have tried to contact
his family many times, but no one cares.”
Dr. Al-Huti authorized
three meals a day for him but told him that doctors would not tend to his
imaginary complaints. That didn’t work too well.
“Somehow he still manages
to get doctors’ attention to give him daily checkups,” Dr. Al-Huti said. “This
phenomenon of abandonment by families of their elders is new in our community,”
he said, “and it is unacceptable to the majority of Saudi society.”
|
Friday, 2 March 2012
Mohd Jafaruddin: Free meals for the urban poor
Mohd Jafaruddin: Free meals for the urban poor: News Straits Times Written by ERA Administrator Tuesday, 03 May 2011 23:28 KUCHING: When all things seemed gloomy for the ha...
Free meals for the urban poor
News Straits Times
Written
by ERA Administrator
Tuesday, 03 May 2011 23:28
KUCHING: When all things
seemed gloomy for the hardcore poor in the city, Society for the Kuching Urban
Poor (SKUP) has brought a ray of hope to ensure that these people do not go to
sleep hungry.
SKUP, a non-governmental organisation, is a mobile soup kitchen which provides one free meal a day for needy urban dwellers.
The meals are distributed once a day in six areas where there is a concentration of hardcore poor families -- Taman Desa Wira Market, Poh Kwong Park Roundabout Shed, Unaco Supermarket behind Nanas Road West, Song Kheng Hai Ground Food and Recreation Centre in Padungan, Petanak Wet Market and Pasar Sungai Apong from Monday to Saturday.
On Saturdays, additional dry foods are also distributed to the needy for their Sunday rations.
One of those who benefits from the programme is Stefner Lagan, 8, who lives in one of the slums in Kampung Kudei. Her home in the squatter colony is a small dilapidated wooden shack accessible via a maze of slippery and partly broken wooden walkways connected to the main road of Jalan Nanas.
Born to a single father, Lagan Kapus, Stefner attends school at SK Combined, which is five minutes walk from her home.
She lives with her brothers, Johan, 13 and Braco, 12.
Her father, an odd job worker, is usually not around, leaving the children on their own or with their aunt who lives about 50m away.
Their mother died from an illness in 2006.
Cheerful and giggly when met by the New Straits Times, Stefner said she loved going to school because there were many things to do and learn.
"I will study hard and become a teacher one day. I don't like living in this small, dirty and smelly place, but that's all right for now," she said while eating her fried beehoon given by SKUP.
Housewife Selah Jelapang, 37, said she had been receiving daily food for about six months.
"I'm glad there are still good people out there who take pity on us. Although we only get one packet for each family, we are grateful as it is better than nothing."
With four young children and her husband doing odd jobs, most of the time it is difficult for them to put food on the table.
SKUP secretary Fabian Wong said the society, which was set up in September last year, had identified about 300 poor families in Kuching who found it difficult to get two square meals a day.
"We started by distributing meals once a day at the six centres where poor families can collect them. We provide a different menu every day.
"On Saturdays we distribute bread and eggs. On Sundays, we give dried foodstuff such as instant noodles which they can cook themselves."
Now, SKUP gives out 250 meals every day and its estimated that the number will reach 300 meals by next month.
Explaining the procedure, Wong said SKUP gave free meals to families with three to six children with household income of less than RM500 a month.
"Our ultimate aim is to help them break away from poverty.
"For example, we can teach them to plant crops, rear fish and other livestock or do business so that they can be independent."
Asked how long SKUP will continue the programme, Wong said it would do so as long as it could, with the support of the public.
He sees it as a continuous operation for many more years to come.
SKUP, a non-governmental organisation, is a mobile soup kitchen which provides one free meal a day for needy urban dwellers.
The meals are distributed once a day in six areas where there is a concentration of hardcore poor families -- Taman Desa Wira Market, Poh Kwong Park Roundabout Shed, Unaco Supermarket behind Nanas Road West, Song Kheng Hai Ground Food and Recreation Centre in Padungan, Petanak Wet Market and Pasar Sungai Apong from Monday to Saturday.
On Saturdays, additional dry foods are also distributed to the needy for their Sunday rations.
One of those who benefits from the programme is Stefner Lagan, 8, who lives in one of the slums in Kampung Kudei. Her home in the squatter colony is a small dilapidated wooden shack accessible via a maze of slippery and partly broken wooden walkways connected to the main road of Jalan Nanas.
Born to a single father, Lagan Kapus, Stefner attends school at SK Combined, which is five minutes walk from her home.
She lives with her brothers, Johan, 13 and Braco, 12.
Her father, an odd job worker, is usually not around, leaving the children on their own or with their aunt who lives about 50m away.
Their mother died from an illness in 2006.
Cheerful and giggly when met by the New Straits Times, Stefner said she loved going to school because there were many things to do and learn.
"I will study hard and become a teacher one day. I don't like living in this small, dirty and smelly place, but that's all right for now," she said while eating her fried beehoon given by SKUP.
Housewife Selah Jelapang, 37, said she had been receiving daily food for about six months.
"I'm glad there are still good people out there who take pity on us. Although we only get one packet for each family, we are grateful as it is better than nothing."
With four young children and her husband doing odd jobs, most of the time it is difficult for them to put food on the table.
SKUP secretary Fabian Wong said the society, which was set up in September last year, had identified about 300 poor families in Kuching who found it difficult to get two square meals a day.
"We started by distributing meals once a day at the six centres where poor families can collect them. We provide a different menu every day.
"On Saturdays we distribute bread and eggs. On Sundays, we give dried foodstuff such as instant noodles which they can cook themselves."
Now, SKUP gives out 250 meals every day and its estimated that the number will reach 300 meals by next month.
Explaining the procedure, Wong said SKUP gave free meals to families with three to six children with household income of less than RM500 a month.
"Our ultimate aim is to help them break away from poverty.
"For example, we can teach them to plant crops, rear fish and other livestock or do business so that they can be independent."
Asked how long SKUP will continue the programme, Wong said it would do so as long as it could, with the support of the public.
He sees it as a continuous operation for many more years to come.
Post at: http://www.eraconsumer.org/eraconsumer/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=498:free-meals-for-the-urban-poor&catid=39:hr-in-the-news&Itemid=61
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