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10 couples willing to adopt baby girl abandoned in Katpadi: Activist

The hospital doctors informed that they are waiting for collector P Kumaravel Pandian to form a committee to decide the future of the girl, he said.

VELLORE, CHENNAI: Ten couples have expressed willingness to adopt the child, who was abandoned at the Katpadi railway station, social activist and government vet Dr Ravi Shankar said Friday.

Shankar visited the child at the Vellore government medical college hospital. Two women constables were also in attendance at the venue, he added.

The infant, who was found at the railway station on Thursday, was admitted to the paediatric intensive care unit (ICU) of the hospital immediately for a thorough check-up. A woman carrying the baby had asked an old age couple to hold the girl as she wanted to go to the toilet. The couple informed the railway police, when the woman did not turn up.

Uploading the girl’s photo on social media, Shankar said, “I received ten phone calls from couples in and around Vellore who expressed willingness to adopt the girl child legally.”

Discrimination between biological & adoptive mothers: SC agrees to examine the law

Under the Maternity Benefit Act, there is no provision for maternity leave for a mother who is adopting an abandoned, orphaned, or foster child who is older than three months.

By Kanu Sarda: For Karnataka-based Hamsaanandini Nanduri, an adoptive mother since 2017, bringing up her two young children was an uphill task because of the discriminatory provisions under the Maternity Benefit Act.

When Hamsaanandini went for adoption through the Central Adoption Resource Authority (CARA), she was given the option of adopting two children who were siblings and CARA did not want them to be separated. She readily agreed to adopt the four-and-half-year-old girl and her two-year-old brother.

Rolf Widmer - Curriculum Vitae

Studies

1968 to 1971

lic. Nat. oec. in Paris and Basel

1971 to 1975

Studies: Social service work/ Psychology in Luzern and Fribourg

ATTENTION ALL GREEK-BORN ADOPTEES!!! PLEASE READ THE ENTIRE POST!!!***

The Eftychia Project

5 May at 00:41 ·

ATTENTION ALL GREEK-BORN ADOPTEES!!! PLEASE READ THE ENTIRE POST!!!*** (This post was originally posted on the private group “Forgotten Children of Greece”. More than 30 Greek-born adoptees have already agreed to join this lawsuit. This is open to all Greek-born adoptees)

***UPDATE ON ACCESS TO RECORDS AND RESTORATION OF GREEK CITIZENSHIP***

It is painfully apparent that the Greek state has no real interest in acknowledging us, making our birth, orphanage and adoption records easily accessible or restoring our Greek citizenship. We have been fighting for this for over 2 years now and enough is enough. Now is the time to take action and that is precisely what we are going to do.

Biological parents of child given for adoption file habeas corpus plea in Bombay HC

The bench said if the adoptive parents fail to get a stay from the other bench, appropriate orders will be passed on the next date of hearing on June 7.

By Vidya : The Bombay High Court has granted five weeks' time to a Mumbai couple to get a stay from another bench of the high court on an order of the Mumbai Civil court, which had directed them to return their adopted child to its biological parents.

The bench of Justices Revati Mohite Dere and Sharmila Deshmukh were hearing a habeas corpus petition filed by the biological parents through their lawyer, Edith Dey. Dey submitted before the court that when the lower court had directed the adoptive parents to hand over the child to the biological parents, it had stayed its own order for a few weeks. After the stay period lapsed, and when the child was not handed over, they approached the court with a habeas corpus plea.

Dylan Thiry, influencer or "white savior"?

The former reality TV star, who has made several humanitarian trips to the continent in recent years, has been at the center of a controversy since rapper Booba accused him of wanting to kidnap a child in Madagascar.

Immaculate white sneakers, good looks and a big smile. Dylan Thiry, Luxembourg influencer with 1.6 million subscribers on Instagram, nevertheless wets the jersey. In 2021, we see him, under a bright sun, carrying food in a Senegalese village surrounded by many children.

Thiry, just under 30, often shows himself surrounded by smiling kids in the videos that document his humanitarian trips, in particular those made on the continent, in Morocco, Senegal or Madagascar.

"I take a big ticket and it saves a child"

But for the past few days, the handsome, friendly-looking kid who has set up his own charity, For our children, has been the subject of a lively controversy on social networks. In question: the publication, on April 25, by Booba, a famous French rapper of Senegalese origin in open war against influencers, of a voice message whose author would be Dylan Thiry.

What is Illegal Adoption?

Adoption has been a common theme in Ireland for the last 100 years and until recently was administered predominantly by institutions associated with the Catholic Church. Adoption was particularly common in Ireland due to the perceived guilt and shame of having a child out of wedlock. Thousands of children were admitted to the care of adoption institutions who failed to adopt proper procedures for the registration of adoptions.

Investigations carried out by Barnardo’s children’s charity have found that there may be up to 15,000 illegal adoptions throughout Ireland where adoptive parents were registered as birth parents.

The organisation Adoptions Rights Allowance have also found that at least 182 institutions or individuals across Ireland have been involved in illegal adoption practices.

One such institution that has come under intense scrutiny is the now defunct St Patrick’s Guild who have been found to be responsible for the incorrect registration of 126 adoptions. This led to TUSLA, Ireland’s child protection agency, contacting the affected individuals in 2018 to inform them of this practice of illegal adoption.

What Legal Action can be Taken?

Interlandelijke adoptie | Defence for Children (Intercountry Adoption | Defense for Children)

International adoption

What is a Dutch intercountry adoption?

When a child born abroad, without Dutch nationality, is brought to the Netherlands for adoption, we call this a Dutch intercountry adoption. The Netherlands is the receiving country, the other country the country of origin or the sending country. Adoption literally means adopting a child. The child is given a new identity, including a new family, (surname) name and nationality.

How is intercountry adoption arranged in the Netherlands?

The most important rules that apply to Dutch prospective adoptive parents who want to adopt a child are contained in the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, the Hague Adoption Convention and the (Dutch) Adoption of Foreign Children Act (Wobka) of 1998.

Authentic, honest anthropologist - Om | Kirapumali

My name is Kira Pumali Pedersen. I am a 33-year-old educational anthropologist who is engaged to Martin. Together we have two children, Rose and Falke, and live in a small terraced house with lots of projects. I was adopted from Sri Lanka and came to Denmark when I was 10 weeks old.

In 2019, I became a mother for the first time to Rose. She arrived seven weeks early and my path into parenthood was very tumultuous. After a year, I started with a fantastic psychologist at the Gaia Institute, who asked me to consider going to a hotel for at least 24 hours. I didn't have to think about that for long and after a day alone, I came home with courage and passion.

It had taken me a long time to accept that I was struggling with parenting and had come down with a postpartum reaction. Convinced that I couldn't be the only one having a hard time, I therefore created the Instagram account "Parent Reactions".

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Since then a lot has happened and I now share about most aspects of my and my family's life. It wasn't long before I discovered that I can't separate my experience of parenthood with adoption, Rose's life as a preemie, mental health, and yes, everything else.

Man who was sold at age 6 for his organs the focus of new documentary

Memories can be precious. But Alexander Guibault’s first memories are horrific.

“I sometimes feel I am meant to survive,” Guibault said.

When Alexander was about six, his family sold him to organ traffickers. He was taken from rural Guatemala and put in a basement in Guatemala City. He remembers being tied to a post and held captive with other kids. He recalls a doctor coming for each of them, examining their bodies and marking a “Y” on the children’s chests.

“I was marked,” he said. “I will say the three kids before me was cut open and I can’t really specify which organs was removed.”

Alexander’s instinct was to run and escape. When his capturers were drunk, he and a few others took off. He survived on the streets and in several orphanages, but his life was not without abuse.