Under the earthquake in Syria, the miracle baby born in the middle of kidnapping fears moved

Under the earthquake in Syria, the miracle baby born in the middle of kidnapping fears moved

The orphaned Syrian baby, which was born after the earthquake last week under the ruins of her collapsed house, was brought to a safe place for fear that it could be kidnapped.

thousands of people offered to adopt the little girl after her miraculous escape from the ruins of her house in Jindaryis near the border with Turkey had made headlines worldwide.

The Afrin health directorate took precautions to prevent Aya from being kidnapped in Arabic, and exposed to a possible adoption fraud.

On Monday, the hospital contested in the Syria held by the opposition, in which Aya is treated that there was a thwarted kidnapping attempt.

A nurse is said to have beaten a manager in an incident accompanied by two armed men who triggered claims on social media that there was an attempt to go.

"The allegations of kidnapping were a misunderstanding. This was a purely hospital -internal problem and had no connection with the baby," said Dr. Ahmad Hajj Hassan opposite the BBC.

The nurse attacked the manager because he had been fired by his post.

The health department is determined to act carefully and in the best interest of AYA despite the flood of adoption offers.

The manager of the hospital, Khalid Attiah, said his wife Stille Aya together with her own four -month daughter. You would take care of her until she was adopted, he said.

On February 6,

Aya's mother used the contractions in southern Turkey and Syria on February 6th. After birth she died in a disaster, in which Aya's father, four siblings and aunt also died.



aya was still connected to her mother by her umbilical cord when savior under several layers of concrete.

Aya's father, Abdullah Turki Mleihan, originally came from the village of Khsham in the eastern province of Deir El-Zour, but left the village in 2014, after the Islamic State group conquered its village, said a relative.

around 200 buildings collapsed in the Jindaryis held by rebels, which is about five miles from the Turkish border and was one of the worst affected cities in Syria in the earthquake.

So far,

over 500 corpses have been recovered by the white helmets that lead the search and rescue efforts there.

Source: The Telegraph

Kommentare (0)