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Unravelling the Mystery

as a child

Sunitha’s earliest photo at the Orphanage

I was born in a rural area of southern India at the beginning of 1979. I passed through a Catholic orphanage before reaching my adoptive home in Belgium, April 1981.

My adoptive parents already had two biological sons, aged 6 and 8. I grew up with the knowledge that my adoptive parents wanted a daughter. I learned later in life that they felt responsible for the death of their first son, who passed away from leukaemia. They wanted to provide a safe haven for a disadvantaged child. India came as a second choice because it was too complicated to adopt a Belgian child.

They had prepared two names for me. The feminine of the son they lost – Patricia and Angelique – like angel. Eventually, they kept my Indian name saying they liked it and it fitted well in Belgium.

States asked to curb illegal adoption and Child trafficking.

To address the grave concerns that has come to notice, through media reports, that some organizations have been propagating illegal adoption outside the domain of the Juvenile Justice Act, 2015, which is tantamount to child trafficking, the Ministry of Women and Child Development has instructed that all the State Govts/UTs should ensure that all the registered Child Care institutions, whether run by a State Government or by voluntary or non-governmental organizations, are linked to Specialized Adoption Agencies and are reflected in the online portal CARINGS within one month. This applies to all CCIs which are meant, either wholly or partially, for housing children in need of care and protection or children in conflict with law,

Further for speedy execution, State Govt/UTs have also been asked to publish this direction in the local newspaper to ensure compliance by the institutions within the stipulated period, failing which action may be taken against the non-complying institutions.

State Govts/UT have also been asked to issue instructions for conducting inspection of all homes run by Missionaries of Charity and also identify all potential institutions/organizations which could be involved in unlawful activities. Conduction of timely inspections of the Institutions, as per the provisions of Section 54 of the Act, has also been advised.

Besides in order to check the illegal adoptions, State Govt/UTs have been asked to keep a close watch on the maternity hospitals and other facilities, which may also act as potential places for illegal and child trafficking. A Status report has been asked from the States/UTs by 31.07.2018

A Background note:

Did 'Lion effect' inspire Australian green light on India adoptions?

The family who inspired the Hollywood film Lion say their story may have contributed to the Australian government's decision this week to reverse a ban on adoptions from India.

"I think maybe the movie ended up getting into the hearts of those bureaucrats to open those gates again," Saroo Brierley, played by Dev Patel in the 2016 film, told SBS News.

Dev Patel

Dev Patel in Lion.

Transmission

ORDER–SHEET FOR CIVIL COURT

Morigaon Mahila Mehfil Vs. Ms. Ana Isabel Buendia Bermejo

Sl. No.

of

Orders

Date Order Signature

Let's raise our voice together for India's voiceless children

Why This Campaign

We are failing to protect the most vulnerable children in India. The number of abandoned and orphaned children range from 25 Million to 30 Million. Yet the number of children in child care institutions (aka shelters) range from 0.25 to 0.5 Million. Out of these, the number of children available for adoption at any point is fewer than 2000.

Why is there no reconciliation for the wide chasm between 30,000,000 and 2000?

Are the children being trafficked for inhumane and illicit purposes? Are they languishing in shelters that are not even registered or not linked to adoption agencies? Why are the millions of children who we see on streets, labouring in restaurants, carrying out chores in unorganised sector not on the rolls of child care institutions or adoption agencies?

Depending on who you ask, people will give you complex answers. But here is the thing — there are clear, concrete, fixable issues that can be addressed and have been brought to light several times by the media, Supreme Court, and even the central government. Yet there is no difference made to the horrific statistics on vulnerable children.

170 children died in UP adoption homes in five years: Govt data

Children died,Unhygienic condition,Adoption homes

UP government authorities said that poor health of children lodged in state adoption homes was responsible for this figure.(Representative image)

Over the past five years, UP witnessed death of 170 children in the state-run adoption centres. This figure, revealed as part of data furnished by the union ministry of women and child development in the ongoing Parliament session, is only marginally lower than Maharashtra’s 172 over the same period.

UP government authorities said that poor health of children lodged in state adoption homes was responsible for this figure. Commissioner for protection of child rights, Uttar Pradesh, Vishesh Gupta, said, “Sometimes, children lodged in adoption centres have been rescued by stake holding agencies in peculiar situations. Sometime, children are rescued from the roadside and are already suffering from infections. In such a situation, it becomes difficult to save their life despite earnest attempts.”

He also admitted that the state lacked trained manpower in its adoption homes. “Lack of manpower is also an issue. We don’t have the training mechanism and the infrastructure that is needed. It has been observed that the staff is not adequately trained to take care of such children,” said Gupta.

“One Child Nation,” Reviewed: A Powerful Investigation of a Chinese Policy’s Personal Toll

“One Child Nation,” Reviewed: A Powerful Investigation of a Chinese Policy’s Personal Toll

By Richard BrodyAugust 9, 2019

One of the crucial revelations of “One Child Nation” is the power of propaganda, by sheer force of its ubiquity—and its uncontested hegemony.Photograph Courtesy Amazon Studios

Any investigative journalist could have pursued the story told in “One Child Nation,” a new documentary directed by Nanfu Wang and Jialing Zhang, about China’s former policy (in force from 1979 to 2015) of limiting families to a single child each. Indeed, they include one such daring and persistent journalist in the film. But for Wang, who was born in China in 1985 (and immigrated to the United States in 2011, at the age of twenty-six), the one-child policy is also the story of her own childhood, and in her bold, probingly investigative, painfully intimate film, she approaches her subject with regard to its most personal implications. In so doing, she locates the political network in which lives like hers were caught, and traces the one-child policy’s consequences, as well as the attitudes underlying it, into the present day and into her own life, the lives of others, and the world at large.

Wang is present onscreen as she pursues and conducts interviews, including with members of her family; she frames and analyzes the movie from within by way of her voice-over narration, and her investigation is an integral on-camera element of the action. To watch that investigation, both public and private, is to confront an overwhelming, colossal network of atrocities and their official justifications—a vast system of control and coercion, deceit and corruption, that’s fostered and managed from the highest levels of government and leaves its mark throughout Chinese society. She addresses the ingrained failures of much conventional, arm’s-length journalism and its unchallenged conventions—exemplified, near the start of the film, in a clip of a TV-news report featuring Tom Brokaw, who parrots the Chinese government’s rationale for the one-child policy (prosperity) and says that it is pursued through a combination of “fines, economic incentives, and propaganda.” Wang shows, in the course of the film, how that policy was actually pursued—not merely with fines but with cruelly punitive force and horrific violence.

A new law on the protection of minors in Kenya, " Children Bill ", is awaiting approval by the government before being examined

A new law on the protection of minors in Kenya, " Children Bill ", is awaiting approval by the government before being examined by Parliament.

It is a period of great ferment for Kenyan legislation on the rights of the child and, in particular, for the protection of minors without families.

Pending approval of the new "Children Bill"

The approval of the new law, "Children Bill" , represents a fundamental step towards the resumption of adoptions in the country and a relaunch of the system for protecting the rights of children in a state of adoptability who are waiting to meet a family that will welcome them, who whether in Kenya or abroad. An important reform of the current system of foreign entities authorized for international adoption which will introduce clearer procedures, both in terms of the requisites required and their fulfillment.

The current law undergoing reform was approved by Kenya in 2001 to comply with the obligations deriving from the African Charter. In 2010, the country also approved major constitutional reforms to comply with the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child and other international child protection standards.