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RIGHT OF ADOPTION, RIGHT OF DESCENT AND OPENING OF MARRIAGE

Why was there no equality in the law of parentage with marriage for all?

The "marriage for all" has not changed the right of parentage. To this day, stepchild adoption is the only way for two-mother families to achieve common legal parenthood. However, same-sex couples were given equal status in terms of joint adoption law through the opening of marriage.

Opening of marriage and right of parentage

The "Law on the Introduction of the Right to Marriage for Persons of the Same Sex", which came into force on October 1st, 2017, has not changed the rules of parentage.

The mother of a child is still only the woman who gave birth to the child ( § 1591 Mutterschaft BGB ). For children who are born into a marriage, § 1592 No. 1 BGB determines that the husband is the second legal parent of the child, regardless of whether he is actually the biological father of the child or not. But this regulation has not been extended to include the “mother's wife”. To this day, stepchild adoption is the only way for two-mother families to achieve mutual legal parenthood and the associated security.

Italian couple arrive to take adopted son home

Travel restrictions lifted

Alberto and Dossi Sinalda, who had been speaking to Mahendra over video calls for months, finally got to hug him and take him back home

He had only seen and spoken to them over video calls. But when Alberto and Dossi Sinalda walked through the doors, joy lent wings to Mahendra's feet and he ran to hug his parents.

The Sinaldas, who are in their mid-thirties, had adopted the almost six-year-old boy in March but lockdown kept them apart for so long. As restrictions eased, the couple finally flew in from Italy and arrived at the

orphanage on Tuesday to take their son home.

History Fiom

Fiom stands for freedom of choice in the event of an unwanted pregnancy and the right to parentage information. The current Fiom organization originated from many predecessors and has existed since 1930.

2014

Due to the substantial cutbacks and the transition in healthcare, Fiom is developing as a specialist on unwanted pregnancy and parentage questions. Fiom is committed to the right of freedom of choice for pregnant women and the right to parentage information.

Online support, such as on unwanted pregnancy and abortion processing, is becoming more important because the offline help has decreased. External funding is being sought to continue to provide offline help. The amendment by Voortman below was adopted in December 2013 with broad support from the Lower House.

“ This amendment serves as an additional impetus to provide information to teens about pregnancy and to support the decision on whether to continue the pregnancy through neutral decision-making discussions. This amendment therefore regulates a targeted increase of EUR 1,000,000 for this target group and this task, without linking it to one specific institution. In consultation with the institutions that carry out the aforementioned tasks, further criteria will be drawn up for the use of these resources in such a way that more parties can make use of these resources. "

Cost of a search

This page contains more information about our rates for domestic and foreign searches.

Costs for a search in the Netherlands

A domestic search costs € 85.

This amount is a personal contribution for the search. For Fiom, the total cost of a search is much higher. The rest of the costs are paid from government subsidies. Fiom is a non-profit organization and we do not earn anything from conducting searches.

For this amount we do the following:

I HAVE ADOPTED A CHILD IN ROMANIA

Odyssey of a gesture of love.

Goodmorning everyone.

I am the lucky father of a child adopted now over two years ago. I'm not going to tell you about the first. Ours was a difficult adoption that lasted three years, during which emotions often took over, but in the end we managed to adopt this child from Romania.

We see Francesco for the first time on a photocopy of a photo sent by fax, one day in April 2000 at the Rome office of the Association we had contacted.

Francesco, they say, is the child highlighted by the cross, because he is photographed together with a companion, and he has a balloon in his hand.

Pieter Bult, UNICEF Representative in Romania

Mr. Pieter Woltjo Bult was appointed as the UNICEF Representative for Romania in July 2017 at a time when UNICEF and Romania were developing their new partnership for children for 2018-2022. The objective of this partnership is to support the progressive realization of child rights and the reduction of equity gaps affecting children and their families in Romania and beyond by developing quality, universal, community-based, child and family-centered services and transforming social norms related to discrimination and violence against children. Furthermore, UNICEF and the Government of Romania are committed to identifying and sharing best practices in advancing children’s rights at the regional and global level.

Mr. Bult has been working for children as an international civil servant for more than 20 years. He has extensive experience around the world, working in humanitarian contexts as well as at UNICEF Headquarters.

Between 2011 and 2017, he served as the UNICEF Senior Advisor for the Public Partnership Division at the New York Headquarters where he led a team dealing with Europe and Central Asia on collaboration with governments including some of UNICEF’s biggest donors. Previously, he worked as Deputy Country Director of Programmes for UNDP in India, supporting the design and management of the UNDP - Government of India Country Programme, focusing on poverty reduction, social protection and climate change. Between 2006 and 2007, Pieter headed the UN Tsunami Recovery Programme in India, in charge of coordinating and directing seven UN agencies in response to the Tsunami in India. Earlier, he was the UNICEF Learning Officer for the Organizational Learning and Development section in the Division of Human Resources based at New York Headquarters.

Between 1996 and 2001, Mr. Bult developed programming and managed emergency response to the food crisis in Indonesia and child protection and education crisis in the State of Palestine. He started his career as UNICEF Assistant Programme Officer in Suriname where he designed and managed the first UNICEF Country Programme in the country.

Mr. Bult has a Master’s degree in Human Geography of Developing Countries from the Catholic University of Nijmegen and a Bachelor’s Degree in Education from the School for Higher Professional Education, Netherlands.

Four suspects arraigned as investigations into child trafficking claims intensify

Four more suspects have been arraigned over a child trafficking syndicate at Mama Lucy Kibaki Hospital in Nairobi following an expose that revealed the underworld of baby-selling activities within Kenya’s capital.

The police had vowed to hunt down the syndicate, whose undertakings involved selling babies in the pretext of helping individuals not willing to go through a formal adoption process.

According to the police, the criminals targeted public hospitals and children's homes within Nairobi in the trade.

On Thursday, Dr Musa Mohammed Ramadhan, Beatrice Njambi Njoroge, Selina Awour Adundo and Juliana Mbete Kimwele appeared in court to answer to the charges of child trafficking crime.

Read More

the baby-selling scheme: poor pregnant Marshall Islands women lured to the US

Rolson Price still scans Facebook for her picture. He’s seen her occasionally, at the periphery of someone else’s photo, instantly recognisable.

But he’s never met her, and concedes he never will.

He still doesn’t know his daughter’s name.

Price is one of dozens of victims of an extraordinary and brazen human trafficking ring, operating for years across the Marshall Islands archipelago and three states of the United States of America. The scheme involved pregnant Marshallese women being lured to the United States and enticed, with offers of $10,000 and the promise of a new life in America, to give up their babies, which were then adopted out to US couples willing to pay four times that amount for a child.

Paul Petersen, a 45-year-old former elected county official in Arizona, pleaded guilty to human smuggling, conspiracy to smuggle illegal aliens, and fraud in a US federal court. He has been sentenced to six years in prison, and faces further jail time still on more charges.

Births not registered and forged adoption signatures at mother and baby homes

Survivors adopted from mother and baby homes have said many of them left without their births being registered and some with the signatures on their adoption papers being forged.

Others only became aware of the fact as adults that they had been the subject of secret vaccine trials while babies in the facilities in Cork and Tipperary.

The revelation came as Sean Ross Abbey in Roscrea, Co Tipperary, remained the major focus of revelations about the appalling treatment of young women and their babies.

With Tuam in Galway and Bessborough in Cork, Sean Ross Abbey ranked among the most notorious of Ireland’s mother and baby homes.

Sean Ross Abbey was also at the centre of the story of Philomena Lee whose campaign to trace her son – sent to the US for adoption in the 1950s – was the basis of a BAFTA-winning film.

Featured Illegal adoptions? Stolen children? Adopted children request an investigation

Following a similar investigation, the Netherlands recently suspended all foreign adoptions.

Falsification of documents, lost files, victims of child trafficking: a group of people adopted abroad and adoptive parents is asking the French government for an investigation to shed light on "illegal practices" observed during international adoptions.

"We, adopted people and French adoptive parents, ask the government and parliamentarians to set up a commission of inquiry so that illegal practices in international adoption since the 1970s are noted", write the members of this recent collective for the Recognition of illicit adoptions in France (Raif) in a petition addressed to the National Assembly and published on the Change.org site.

Mali, Guatemala, Sri Lanka, Peru: illegal adoptions? Stolen children?

In recent years, several children adopted in France, now adults, have testified in books or in the media of difficulties in accessing their origins, even of fraudulent procedures during their adoption.