Thursday, February 12, 2026
ADVT 
India

Abandoned In 1998, Two New Zealand Sisters Come Looking For Saviour Cop

Darpan News Desk IANS, 05 Jan, 2019 12:09 AM

    Adopted children, when they grow up, often feel the urge to track down their biological parents, but two sisters from New Zealand travelled to Pune recently to meet a police constable.

     

    For, it was this policeman who had picked them up from the roadside where their biological parents had abandoned them.

     

    Seema Zeenath (24) and Reema Saziya (23) landed at Deccan Gymkhana police station along with their adoptive parents on Tuesday.

     

    They not only wanted to meet the policeman who had found them, but also see the police station where he had brought them.

     

    “Our records showed that Sarjerao Kamble, who retired in 2007 as assistant sub-inspector, had found these two sisters abandoned on the roadside on April 25, 1998. One of them was two years old, another was three,” said senior police inspector Bhaskar Jadhav of Deccan Gymkhana police.

     

    Kamble, then a constable, searched for their parents, and not finding them, handed the girls over to Shreevatsa, a child-care centre run by the Society of Friends of the Sassoon Hospital (SOFOSH).

     

    The sisters, named Seema and Reema at the orphanage, were later adopted by a couple from Wellington, New Zealand.

     

    “The two sisters and their adoptive parents had visited Shreevatsa twice earlier. But they had not sought to know how the sisters landed at the centre as kids,” said Sharmila Sayyad, the administration in-charge at SOFOSH.

     

    “This time, before coming to Pune, they requested for the details and expressed a wish to meet Kamble,” she said.

     

    While Seema is a teacher now, Reema works as an engineer, she said.

     

    Adopted children, when they grow up, often feel the urge to track down their biological parents, but two sisters from New Zealand travelled to Pune recently to meet a police constable.


    For, it was this policeman who had picked them up from the roadside where their biological parents had abandoned them.


    Seema Zeenath (24) and Reema Saziya (23) landed at Deccan Gymkhana police station along with their adoptive parents on Tuesday.


    They not only wanted to meet the policeman who had found them, but also see the police station where he had brought them.


    “Our records showed that Sarjerao Kamble, who retired in 2007 as assistant sub-inspector, had found these two sisters abandoned on the roadside on April 25, 1998. One of them was two years old, another was three,” said senior police inspector Bhaskar Jadhav of Deccan Gymkhana police.


    Kamble, then a constable, searched for their parents, and not finding them, handed the girls over to Shreevatsa, a child-care centre run by the Society of Friends of the Sassoon Hospital (SOFOSH).


    The sisters, named Seema and Reema at the orphanage, were later adopted by a couple from Wellington, New Zealand.


    “The two sisters and their adoptive parents had visited Shreevatsa twice earlier. But they had not sought to know how the sisters landed at the centre as kids,” said Sharmila Sayyad, the administration in-charge at SOFOSH.


    “This time, before coming to Pune, they requested for the details and expressed a wish to meet Kamble,” she said.


    While Seema is a teacher now, Reema works as an engineer, she said.


    Unfortunately, they could not meet the retired policeman before leaving for New Zealand.


    “Kamble is 73 years old now. We tried to get in touch with him and found he was out of town,” inspector Jadhav said.

    Unfortunately, they could not meet the retired policeman before leaving for New Zealand.

     

     

    “Kamble is 73 years old now. We tried to get in touch with him and found he was out of town,” inspector Jadhav said.

    %MCEPASTEBIN%

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Woman, 4-Year-Old Son Found Dead At Home In Haryana

    There were injury marks on the bodies of Nirmala, 50, and her son, apparently made from sharp objects, Haryana police said.

    Woman, 4-Year-Old Son Found Dead At Home In Haryana

    Japan Committed To Make Bullet Train In India A Reality Soon: Shinzo Abe

    Japan Committed To Make Bullet Train In India A Reality Soon: Shinzo Abe
    Japan is funding 80 per cent of the Mumbai-Ahmedabad bullet train project through a soft loan of Rs. 79,000 crore at an interest rate of 0.1 per cent, with a tenure stretching over 50 years and a moratorium period of 15 years.

    Japan Committed To Make Bullet Train In India A Reality Soon: Shinzo Abe

    If Talks With Taliban Fine, Why Not Kashmir Stakeholders: Omar Abdullah

    The Moscow-format meeting on Afghanistan will be held on November 9 and representatives of the Afghan Taliban radical movement will take part in it, the Russian Foreign Ministry had said last week.

    If Talks With Taliban Fine, Why Not Kashmir Stakeholders: Omar Abdullah

    Will Take Feedback On Ending Work Permits For H-1B Holders' Spouses: US

    Will Take Feedback On Ending Work Permits For H-1B Holders' Spouses: US
    H-4 visas are issued only to very close or immediate family members of the H-1B visa holders. It includes the employee's spouse and children less than 21 years of age.

    Will Take Feedback On Ending Work Permits For H-1B Holders' Spouses: US

    Priest Performed 11-Day Puja To Resolve Tej Pratap's Marital Problems

    Lalu Yadav's family members have immense faith in the goddess enshrined there and have been frequent visitors to the temple in eastern Uttar Pradesh, bordering Bihar, said priest Raj Mishra.

    Priest Performed 11-Day Puja To Resolve Tej Pratap's Marital Problems

    Gold Worth Over Rs. 1 Crore Seized At Thiruvananthapuram Airport

    The gold bars and gold biscuits, weighing 3.57 kilograms and valued at Rs. 1.13 crore, were recovered from behind the seat of the flight.  

    Gold Worth Over Rs. 1 Crore Seized At Thiruvananthapuram Airport