Baby Danny’s future remains uncertain despite having almost completed his birth registration in Hong Kong, as welfare authorities still had to assess the capability of his parents, who were earlier arrested for suspected child neglect and have a troubled parental history.
Danny’s welfare sparked public concern over the past week after Tsang Wai-bong and Kwan Pui-sin, who initially declined a DNA test for their home-born son’s birth registration on religious and privacy grounds. They only made a U-turn after their arrest on Tuesday.
The Immigration Department said on Friday night that it had obtained the DNA report and other relevant evidence, confirming that Danny was born in Hong Kong. It had contacted the parents to complete the birth registration procedures.
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The parents went to the department’s headquarters on Saturday after meeting government social workers regarding the guardianship of their two-month-old son, Danny, who has been placed in a children’s shelter under a court order.
The Social Welfare Department said on Friday that its officers had met the parents and that authorities would organise multidisciplinary assessment meetings, submit court reports, and implement a welfare plan for Danny, including arranging for “suitable individuals” to ensure the boy was “properly taken care of in a safe environment”.
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“[The meeting is intended] to further understand the family’s background and relationships, the baby boy’s health situation and care needs, and the parents’ living arrangement and parenting capacity,” the spokesman said.

