The charge of “false and biased reporting” of the Bhattacharya children case is completely incorrect.
Though I have extensively covered and written about the case before, the August 12 stories were actually about the travails of two very small children, one of whom has a serious personality disorder, being made to travel a distance of 250 kilometres twice weekly to meet their mother.
The Hindu has tried several times to speak to Sagarika Chakraborty but she has refused to speak to this reporter and to Ananya Dutta of the paper’s Kolkata bureau for some time now.
My reports are based on extensive video footage obtained from Norwegian sources that show Ms Chakraborty interacting with her children, especially with her son Abhigyan. I have consciously refrained from going into the details of the videos out of a desire to preserve Ms Chakraborty’s privacy and will not provide a detailed description of what they show even now. I will, however, be more than happy to share this material with any expert panel looking into the matter should it request me.
I would like the signatories of this letter to specify the “third parties” whose interests are inimical to Ms Chakraborty’s and on whose declarations I have allegedly based my report.
As a reporter, I have no view on the question of Ms Chakraborty’s “fitness as a mother.” But the claim of the signatories that the two children experienced “normal development … month on month from infancy to within days of their being confiscated by the authorities in Norway” is controverted by a recorded interview the mother and father gave me on March 10, 2012, before their break-up became public.
I was specifically told that Abhigyan had started showing autistic characteristics as of the age of five months. Abhigyan stayed in Kolkata with his mother and maternal grandparents from birth to 14 months.
At the final court hearing in Stavanger attended by the Ministry of External Affairs’ Additional Secretary (West), Baneshri Bose Harisson, and India’s Ambassador and Consular officer, psychologist Melheus Henning gave a detailed report on Abhigyan’s Attachment Disorder and his mother’s depressive state. It describes Abhigyan as suffering from “Indiscriminate bonding disorder; impressive language disorder; parent ill and rejecting; inadequate parental supervision and control.” This reporter possesses a copy of that report and would be willing to share it with the expert panel the signatories refer to.
The final judgment delivered by the Stavanger District Court on April 23, 2012 handing the custody of the children to their paternal uncle describes the mother’s relationship with her children in great detail: “The mother has mental difficulties. She appears to be very unstable/swinging, immature, depressed and anxious… The mother does not involve herself in the children, she ignores them and rejects them and she appears to be threatening towards them. This is shown by the fact that she is angry, screams and lets the son of three years alone in the room even though he strongly expresses fear of being left. She locks the door and makes herself totally inaccessible….” There are many such passages in the judgment.
There is no reason to accept the court’s characterisation as authoritative or as the final word on the matter but it is simply not true that my reports, which have drawn on this material, have been “factually incorrect.”




Karthy,I agree, Norway CWS is not blaming the mom. .
But all others are doing that.
Norway CWS is not protecting the moms interests either. It was never obliged to protect her interests. I dont think she was offered any real guidelines in a fair, non-threatening manner.
But somebody should be protecting her intersts, because taking away kids can devastate your life forever.
Emotional attachment disorder cannot be even possible for infants less than 6 months ( source - Wikipedia )
Please dont mix it with autism, also Autism does not come from relationship with parents. The possibility that the mother was very tired when she was in Norway sounds more likely to me. Any over-worked mother with 2 small children can be snappy or screamy or violent. However this need not be attributed to permanent nature of the mother.
Yes the mother could have done better if she was more controlled, but why not factor in circumstances external to her. Why not provide her with help instead of taking kids away from her permanently. and What about rights of a mother?
Norway protects the interest of growth part the children but completely disregards the rights of the mother. It also dismisses that the relationship with selfless loving parents is an important part of the childhood.
this reporter has been doing a fine job. Much better than the screaming men and women of TV. But it is time to let the matter rest and leave the family alone. They have issues they need to sort out and we don't need to know if and how they do it.
Vaiju Naravane sounds indifferent when she state 'The Hindu has tried several times to speak to Sagarika Chakraborty but she has refused to speak to this reporter and to Ananya Dutta of the paper’s Kolkata bureau for some time now'
This aggrieved family is neither a corporate nor the poor lady a spokesperson responsible to respond to The Hindu's questions.
From the family's perspective the reporter is just another vulture come to eat their wound.
Has the reporter ever thought, how she would respond if she is in this situation.
I can see that the reporter has no bias and has done a commendable job.
People who cry about children being separated from their parents would
do well to remember that not every parent is loving, caring and "fit"
to be a parent. Just because a person can conceive and give birth to a
kid, doesn't immediately confer in them wonderful parenting abilities -
especially when they have mental health issues.
I really pity the kids state.Having lived in Europe I could clearly
see how we Indians differ from their thinking(westerners).In europe
they give atmost importance for child's overall development (they look
in all aspects not just literal mile stones)and wanted to make every
single child's base /development quite strong.This is one reason why
the average intelligence of european is much better than
ours.Awareness about Autisim,PDDnos Aspergers etc is very very poor in
India.As the Norwegian psychologists expressed The mother could be a
lovable person but that is not sufficient for bringing up a kid who
has attachment and anxiety disorder.They are not blaming the mom but
they are finding out the root cause and wanted to help the kid.I would
have appreciated the mom, if she had followed their guidelines ,she
need not have separated from kids . Western countries do lots of
research in these areas.The child could've been benefited if the
mother was little bit flexible and non egoist.
One: Psychologist Melheus Henning report is not to be taken seriously
at all.It has all been manufactured in her own mind. I wonder which
nomenclature she referred to while making this diagnosis?
Two: Insanity is a social construct which has been and continuously
been used against women to subvert their voices.In this case it has
also been used as a convenient tool to violate Ms Chakraborty's
rights/entitlements.
Three: Now that the context is India, one will and has to follow 'Laws
of the Land' no matter what Norway has pronounced.
Vaiju,
I am not convinced. Your bias is is very clear to me.
Sagarika must have had what I can describe as the "worlds most difficult time possible", naturally she was withdrawn, hence she didnt respond.
The psychologists report, blames the mother entirely. Where in this context does it identify with the problems of the mother. Which of these problems were solvable? how could they have been resolved. Who takes the ownership of these issues?
Why are you blind to the issues faced by Sagarika?
Why haven't you gathered those "facts" ?
Even if your article is fact-based, you have isolated only certain facts and not gathered other facts.
Taking someones children away is huge. very huge.
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