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A German teenager went downstairs to the family freezer in search of a pizza on yesterday and found instead the frozen bodies of three babies wrapped in plastic bags.
Police in the west German town of Olpe have now arrested his mother in what appears to be the latest incident in a wave of infanticide.
The mother named only as Monika H, 44, already has three grown up children aged between 18 and 24. The three babies seem to have been born during roughly the same period as their living brothers and sisters. The oldest would now have been 23 and the youngest 17.
Pathologists were today defrosting the bodies in order to conduct post mortem examinations and discover the cause of death.
According to police investigators Monika H - now under psychiatric care - was able to disguise her pregnancies under large shapeless clothing, and gave birth in the bath.
The forensic examination has to determine whether the babies were born alive before deciding on charges against the woman.
When the teenager discovered the bodies his relatives - said to be well off and living in a large half-timbered house - held a family conference. They then went together, with the distraught mother, to the police. The police seem to be ruling out any other cause of death.
“The crime has basically been solved,” said Chief Inspector Matthias Giese. “We are concentrating for the moment on questioning neighbours and relatives to complete the picture.”
Germany has been hit by what amounts to an infanticide epidemic. In the last fortnight alone, a dead baby boy has been found hidden under rubble in a roadworks in Saxony, another baby turned up in a rubbish recycling centre, and yet another in an attic.
Again and again, babies are stored in deep-freezes. Last year a 39-year-old Bavarian mother was put on trial for strangling her baby daughter and putting her in the icebox.
The woman explained that she was afraid that a new child - she had boys aged 10 and 4 - would threaten her relationship.” He threatened to throw me out if I concealed another pregnancy,” she told the court.
One dead infant was found dumped in a car park litter bin. Others have been dropped, wrapped in plastic shopping bags, into lakes.
Until recently infanticide - the figures are vague, but run to well over a hundred officially recognised cases a year - was presented as an east German problem, the by-product of poor social services, rural poverty and unemployment.
One notorious case saw a woman in Frankfurt an der Oder, close to the Polish border, burying nine dead babies in flowerpots in her garden. Psychologists say that such mothers apparently feel compelled to keep the dead babies near at hand, despite their shame at what they have done.
It has become clear over the past year, however, that the killing of children cannot be seen merely as a regional phemomenen. Last winter a 31 year old mother in the north German region of Schleswig Holstein drugged and suffocated her five children aged between three and nine.
After she went to the police to confess, detectives found the bodies of the boys sprawled on the living room carpet among scattered toys and rusks.
The rise in baby-killing has spawned new interest in the so-called “Baby-Klappe” - hatches built into the sides of hospitals that allow mothers who have recently given birth to deposit their unwanted child in a safe, warm place and head off a possible case of manslaughter or murder. The child can be reclaimed after a week or two and the whole process is anonymous.
A poster campaign has been extolling the merits of the scheme with slogans like: ”Before babies land in the rubbish bin...”
Senior clergymen and some charities oppose the scheme because they say it encourages irresponsible motherhood.
The motivation for baby killing appears to be rooted in a sense of being overwhelmed by responsibility, and the terror of change within a male-female relationship.
“Some women have a greater fear of losing their partners than of losing their child,” says the criminologist Professor Helmut Kury. “They take desperate measures to save a relationship.”
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Definitely an interesting not-to-be-read-elsewhere article from The Times, with interesting comments..All these women had partners. It would be interesting to hear that side of the story, and more of what's going on in Germany. An Emile Zola approach... NB: East German problems were economic.
Niki, The Hague, Netherlands
Almost all comments are based on the idea that the women concerned are somehow of sound mind. Can anyone strangle their baby and be mentally competent? or plant nine babies in flowerpots, and yet provoke a debate which quotes Paul, or a loving Jesus? How terribly sad. We don't know enough about it.
Rue, Bath, UK
Before rushing to call Europe "Godless" there are many religious people in Europe. Also, atheism is often paired with a detailed understanding of evolution, which would put the killing of new life pretty high on the list of "do-nots". The aim should be to understand, prevent & if that fails punish
Odette Lester, London, UK
This is where the Godless-Atheism of Europe is leading us.
Harold, York, UK
There is more than enough information, contraceptive aids and support available in Europe to prevent unwanted childbirth. There is no excuse for these crimes and these women should be held accountable for their actions. Or perhaps it's time for mandatory infertility until proven suitable as a parent
Victor D., Athens, Greece
This is not about a moral or religious degradation. Killing an innocent infant is horrendous by any cultural or religious standard - and is particularly reprehensible in countries with social safety nets and safe hospital baby drop offs. A clearer explanation for infanticide - stupidity.
Natalie, San Francisco, US
Strangling your baby is much more traumathic than abortion and much more brutal...
Laura Fiorini, Brussels, Belgium
Are we really comparing a mother who commits infanticide to a woman who measures up her responsibilties and for reasons she deems suitable, emotional/financial, decides to abort a collection of cells?
God has nothing to do with this debate. Accept responsibility and do not blame a godless society.
Sarah, London,
Please do not blame the "CHURCH" as a whole as birth control is only frowned upon by one!
Never the less, if we went back to worshiping Jesus it would make us all stop and think before we committed these acts.
john knight, Javea,
Abortion on demand has made women lose their maternal instincts... placing the importance of lifestyle above the life of the unborn/born. What is the difference in letting someone else kill your unborn/baby ... from killing your unborn/baby yourself ? (practically none, only a piece of paper....)
carmine cicchiello, adelaide, australia
Paul described: Know this, that in the last days critical times hard to deal with will be here. For men will be lovers of themselves, . . . having no natural affection, not open to any agreement, slanderers, without self-control, fierce, without love of goodness.2 Timothy 3:1-3.
D Griffing, Naples, Long Beach, USA
What can be done to prevent this? Birth control. Make it available for free if necessary. Until "the Church" is going to start raising these children no one really cares what they have to say; especially if they are a bunch of single men!
vic, Kennesaw , USA
There are laws against murder worldwide. We see every day how well those work.
Donnie, Halifax, Canada
Horrifying. What can be done to stop this from happening?
Dan, Winchester, UK