Newborn girl rescued after being found buried alive in Indian cemetery

A four-day-old baby girl has been rescued after she was found buried alive in a cemetery in northern India.

The infant was pulled to safety by an unsuspecting couple in Uttar Pradesh state on October 10, as they were burying their own child who had died in a hospital.



"When they began digging the ground, they immediately heard noises of crying. As they dug up two to three feet of dirt, they found a baby girl who had been buried in an earthen pot," Abhinandan Singh, Superintendent of Police for Bareilly district, told CNN.

A cemetery security guard notified police and took the girl to a nearby hospital.

"The baby had some infections and weighed only 1.5 kilograms (3.3 pounds)," said Alka Sgarna, a medical superintendent who oversaw her treatment, told CNN.

The girl, who is currently receiving treatment in the hospital's intensive care unit (ICU), had various respiratory issues and requires a ventilator, Sgarna said.

Singh said the area where the baby was buried was "quite isolated," and believed she was buried for about four to six hours before she was rescued.

An investigation has been launched to locate her parents, who could be charged with attempt to murder and abandoning a child, Singh added.

Gender inequality is pervasive in India, where a preference for sons has given rise to the birth of millions of "unwanted" girls who often face discrimination in their communities. India was ranked 130 out of 151 countries in last year's Gender Inequality Index, an annual report compiled by the United Nations Development Program.

The country has one of the most unequal sex ratios in the world. According to statistics from its last census in 2011, it only had 918 females for every 1,000 males aged between zero and six. The worldwide average is 952 females per 1000 males.

According to US-based NGO Invisible Girl Project, tens of thousands of female Indian fetuses are aborted every year.