Baby Rescued From Hot Car After It Automatically Locked With Keys Inside

Baby rescued from hot car after it automatically locked with keys inside.

A one-year-old girl was rescued from a hot car afterit locked automatically and trapped her inside intemperatures of around 50C.

The mother, who has not been identified, and her daughter had traveled to Five Dock visiting a local leisure centre, in Sydney’s west at 10.30am on Thursday when the incident took place.

When the mum returned to her car with her daughter, it locked automatically with the keys inside after she put her daughter in her carseat,leaving her daughter trapped inside the hot car.

The mum who was already panicking, hurriedly asked nearby workers to open the door, but to no avail, and so fire services were called in.

Rescue team responds to a baby trapped in a hot car with doors locked and keys inside. Emergency ser.

7 News reported that firefighters used heavy tarpaulins in an attempt to cool down the car and keep the sunlight away from the windows while they worked on opening the doors.

Firefighters and a locksmith tried to openthe lock for 15 minutes, but when itrefused to budge, they were forced to break the window in order to get the baby out before any serious damage was done.

Onlookers filmed the mother’s relieved reunion with her daughter, embracing her as she was rushed to safety.

Baby rescued from hot car after it automatically locked with keys inside.

Witness Paula Santangelo told 7 News the car had automatically locked with the baby girl still inside.

Adam Long, from Fire and Rescue NSW told 7 News that the baby grinned at him and was cheerful during the rescue. “The baby gave me a nice little smile on the way through which was nice, but it was quite hot, it had to have been at least 50 degrees,” he said.

He alsowarned other parents of the dangers of leaving kids in hot cars, given the warmer weather is approaching. “The parents need to keep the keys in their pockets at all times,” he said.

Sources:Au.news.yahoo.comandDailymail.co.uk

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Clare Whitfield Chief Editor
Clare Whitfield is the Editor of Stay at Home Mum and a recognised voice in practical home management for Australian families. Based in the northern suburbs of Sydney, she balances editorial leadership with life as a stay at home mum to two school age children. Her background in home economics and more than a decade of experience in recipe development, family budgeting, and household systems inform her work.

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