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Yeah, in country like Russia where hundreds of thousands of youth are abused and mistreated, I dont need science to see the story. Its a sad article. Maybe it will embarass them [politicians] enough to do something about it. From what I've heard, the child is behaving more like an animal than they say in the media. Oh, and dont take my word for it:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/8070814.stm
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Earlier this year, President Dmitry Medvedev called for more action on child abuse.
He said 750,000 children in Russia were living in "socially hazardous conditions". |
EDIT: According to the website that was brought up in the previous post:
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Feral children, also known as wild children or wolf children, are children who've grown up with minimal human contact, or even none at all. They may have been raised by animals (often wolves) or somehow survived on their own. In some cases, children are confined and denied normal social interaction with other people. |
http://www.feralchildren.com/en/sho....php?ch=natasha
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Natasha Mikhailova had been confined in a room with dogs and cats for several years, in the home she shared with her father Viktor Lozhkin and her grandparents. When found, Natasha hadn't had any contact with her mother Yana Mikhailova for two years.
Natasha was treated as a family pet and as a result, when she was found at the age of 5, she couldn't speak, walked on all fours and barked like a dog, and lapped up food and drink with her tongue.
Although 5 years old when found, Natasha was the size of a two year old. |
... and apparently this condition is very HARD to treat.
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Oxana Malaya, the Ukrainian Dog Girl
Lived with dogs
Not really either a feral child or a confined child, but rather a neglected one, Oxana Malaya spent much of her childhood between the ages of 3 and 8 living in a kennel in the back garden of the family home in Novaya Blagoveschenka, Ukraine, although she did spend some time in the house with her alcholic and neglectful parents.
Oxana Malaya, the Dog Girl
Her childhood spent in the company of dogs meant that Oxana exhibited many of the characteristics of feral children. Her actions and sounds mimicked those of her carers: she would run about on all fours and bark. When first found in 1991 she could hardly speak.
What has become of Oxana Malaya?
In 2006 at the age of 23, Oxana Malaya still resides at a home for the mentally handicapped, the Baraboy Clinic in Odessa, where she helps look after the cows in the Clinic's farm.
See Oxana Malaya's story
Oxana Malaya has been featured in a number of television programmes, including Wild Child: The Story of Feral Children, made by Optomen Television for the Discovery Channel and also shown on Channel 4 (UK), and the first programme in the Confrontation series from NTV (Russia). |
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Last edited by Magnetonium on May-29-2009 at 23:58
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