Viewing seriously the incidents of baby-lifting, the court also said new methods should be introduced to prevent them and directed the state Health Secretary to consider possibility of introducing Radio Frequency Identification (used in shopping malls to prevent theft of goods) in hospitals and submit a report to the court by October 15.
"The court had a Constitutional obligation to take justice to the doorsteps of even those who could not approach it due to poverty, ignorance, illiteracy, want of wherewithal and so on," the Judges said.
It directed that Rs.Three lakh be given to the families of six children who could not be traced at all by the police and Rs one lakh as interim compensation in the cases where the children were being traced.
More From This Section
For the seven babies lifted from hospitals in Dindigul, Cuddalore, Kancheepuram, Tiruchirappalli and also Madurai between 2009 and 2013 were concerned, the judges ordered that their parents were entitled to an interim compensation of Rs.1 lakh each.
The court took up the issue while hearing a habeas corpus petition by T.Meenakshi whose one-day-old baby boy was stolen from Government Rajaji Hospital here on June 15, 2013.
The judges got a report that 42 babies had been lifted from government hospitals across the state since 2006. Of them, only 29 were traced by the police.