Thursday, November 4, 2010

Baby Human For Sale - RM10k/kg, Boy, Nego

Just this morning, my mother-in-law told me that we could have sold our little boy at RM10,000 per kg, which meant that he could be worth about RM80,000 now! Wow, that is a huge sum of money...

I looked at my son and told him, "Mummy wants to sell you so that Mummy can earn RM80,000, okay?" He innocently stared at me with his adorable little eyes and smiled. He just could not understand what Mummy was trying to tell him but whenever I spoke to him, he would just give a toothless smile.

How can anyone be so cruel to sell away their own flesh and blood?

Another news in Singapore where a a baby conceived through in vitro fertilisation (IVF) at a private hospital in Singapore has different DNA to the supposed father, a lawyer representing the clients said Wednesday.

The couple made the shocking discovery after they were told that the baby's blood type was B while they were groups O and A, a scientific impossibility if they were the two biological parents.

"They discovered it a few days after the birth of the baby. They were informed by the paediatrician that the baby's blood group is B," he said. "So they were a bit surprised because the mother is O and the father is A. Biologically it's not possible when you have such a combination."

The couple, a Chinese Singaporean woman and a Caucasian man whose identities the lawyer kept confidential, also started to notice the baby has a distinctly different complexion.

A DNA test carried out last month in a Hong Kong laboratory at the couple's request showed the baby, who was born on October 1 in an emergency caesarean, had the mother's DNA but not the official father's, Palaniappan said. The couple are waiting for the results of another DNA test in Singapore by the Health Sciences Authority, a statutory board under the Ministry of Health (MOH).

Based the latest heard on radio this morning, the couple may not want to keep the baby. 10 months in the womb meant nothing to them?

1 comment:

  1. DNA testing by way of oral swabs is by far the standard procedure of sample collection as it's really quick to perform; nevertheless DNA tests, such as paternity testing.
    DNA Testing

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