- Baby girl denied urgent treatment after being left in a Baby Saver, faces possible brain damage.
- Department of Social Development accused of fearmongering and obstruction.
- Baby Savers SA warns of legal action, citing gross negligence and constitutional violations.
A Johannesburg baby girl is fighting for her life after being denied urgent care, an outcome advocates say is the direct result of government inaction and harmful bureaucracy.
Baby Savers SA warns that government directives are blocking life-saving interventions for abandoned infants. The Department of Social Development stands accused of fearmongering, obstruction, and gross negligence, with the threat of legal action and constitutional complaints looming.
Baby Savers SA operates a network of safe surrender devices, known as Baby Savers, which allow parents to leave newborns safely when they are unable to care for them. The organisation has previously faced legal scrutiny after the department challenged the operation of these devices, citing compliance concerns and the need for statutory oversight.
In 2024, a court case clarified that while Baby Savers SA could operate, statutory services, including child welfare intervention, must be involved for the safety and legal protection of the children. The North Gauteng High Court in Pretoria has granted an extension of the interim rule nisi until 26 January 2026, giving Baby Savers SA and Door of Hope temporary protection while their legal challenge against the Department continues.
The dispute began in 2023 when the department declared baby saver devices illegal and threatened to close Door of Hope Children’s Mission, which cared for 57 children, citing the devices’ use. The organisation refused, highlighting the life-saving role of the devices. A baby saver device is a specially designed box or cradle, often attached to hospitals or children’s care facilities, where a mother can leave her newborn anonymously, ensuring the baby is immediately attended to by trained staff.
It is estimated that at least 3 500 babies are abandoned each year in South Africa, with two out of three found dead, underscoring the human cost of the lack of safe surrender options. Despite the court’s interim protection, the department has not provided clear guidance, leaving organisations like Baby Savers SA caught between legal obligations and urgent child welfare needs.
Baby’s condition deteriorates amid bureaucratic delays
According to a letter sent by legal counsel on behalf of Baby Savers SA, the child, nicknamed Nandi to protect her identity, suffers from hydrocephalus, a condition that has caused severe swelling of her head. On 26 August 2025, she was placed in a Baby Saver at Tree of Hope in Edenvale, Johannesburg. The organisation immediately requested the assistance of Edenvale Child Welfare to provide statutory services for urgent medical treatment.
Instead, on 1 September 2025, the request was refused. A social worker indicated that without a directive from the department or a court order specifically covering Baby Savers, no assistance could be given. The department, though copied on the correspondence, failed to respond. As a result, Tree of Hope transferred Nandi to Lambano Sanctuary, a facility not authorised to provide statutory care but able to keep her comfortable.
Tree of Hope then sought an urgent order from the Germiston Magistrates’ Court, but the application was dismissed on technical grounds. During this delay, Nandi’s condition deteriorated rapidly, and staff feared the worst.
‘This is not a paperwork issue. This is about saving lives’
“This is a dangerous power play that’s putting babies’ lives at risk.” – Dr Whitney Rosenberg, Baby Savers SA
Legal representatives for Baby Savers SA described her prognosis as “extremely precarious” and warned that she would likely die because of the department’s inaction. The organisation had given the department until Friday, 19 September 2025, to intervene or face legal action for gross negligence, as well as complaints to the South African Human Rights Commission and the Public Protector.
Gaps in national child protection strategy
Despite constitutional protections for children’s best interests and international best practice supporting safe surrender options, South Africa has yet to introduce a national strategy for vulnerable infants. Baby Savers SA highlights the absence of an accessible helpline, places of safety outside office hours, or any viable alternatives for desperate parents.
Meanwhile, Baby Savers SA continues to operate with the support of social workers, doctors, SAPS officers, and legal professionals, all of whom witness the human cost of child abandonment firsthand.
“There is no national strategy, no accessible helpline, no places of safety outside office hours, and now they’re punishing innocent babies while trying to silence the people who stepped up,” says Rosenberg.
“We cannot allow power and politics to endanger the most vulnerable,” the organisation urges. “This is not a paperwork issue. This is about saving lives.”
Get your news on the go. Click here to follow the Conviction WhatsApp channel.
