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Aibi in Congo to promote the right of minors to grow up in the family

The international cooperation project "From our heart to that of Africa", in the wake of the initiatives born after the death of Ambassador Attanasio

Kinshasa, Goma, the province of North Kivu and Bas Congo. The Friends of Children Association ( Aibi ) has been present in the Democratic Republic of Congo since 2007 , with numerous projects. A commitment that became even more decisive following the death of the Italian ambassador Luca Attanasio , with whom Aibi had begun to collaborate fruitfully. The new international cooperation project "From our heart to that of Africa" ??also fits into this groove, co-financed by the Commission for international adoptions in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, of which Aibi is the coordinating body, which formally began on July 26, with an overall budget of around 700,000 euros.

The activities, anticipateby the association, will take place over 18 months between the cities of Goma, Mbuji Mayi and Kinshasa and will be carried out in partnership with the Vis, with the Congolese organizations Kimbiliyo and Solidarité Pour le Développement and with the authorized bodies for international adoption Cifa and Naaa. The goal, reads a note, is to "promote the right of minors to live and grow up in a family, encouraging recourse to family reintegration, foster care and adoption for orphaned and out-of-family minors in the Republic Democrat of the Congo". The beneficiaries will be, in particular, 184 children, welcomed in the Don Bosco Ngangi center in Goma and in the Don Bosco Muetu Center in Mbuji Mayi, and 101 children welcomed in the Sodas and Fed centers in Goma, "who will be guaranteed assistance, psychosocial accompaniment and , where possible, family reintegration or alternative family care solutions". Similarly, "100 vulnerable minors in the Ngaliema and Kintambo districts of Kinshasa will be guaranteed the right to study as well as educational and pedagogical support".

Overall, "there will be 600 minors attending the primary school of the St. Georges Mission in Kinshasa who will have the opportunity to strengthen their learning thanks to extra-curricular activities". Not only that: the project, clarified by Aibi, is also aimed at "over 100 families of origin and foster families who will be provided with material support for the implementation of income-generating activities or who will be the recipients of parenting accompaniment and support courses" . Finally, «there are numerous awareness-raising activities on abandonment and the right of the minor to live in the family aimed at Congolese communities and public authorities; the estimate is that with these activities we can reach over 3 thousand people between civil society and representatives of the institutions".

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The politics of good intentions and what I’ve learned from Romania’s ‘orphans’

In his 1927 book Possible Worlds, J. B. S. Haldane claims that ‘until politics are a branch of science, we shall do well to regard … social reforms as experiments’. This is certainly confirmed by the successive reforms undertaken in child protection over the past decades.

A history of child protection (yet to be written) would reveal a history of good intentions that often led to abuse, lost childhoods and struggling adults. The children sent to Australia and Canada after the First World War until the late 1960s or placed into adoption against their mothers’ will (as in Philomena’s story) are such examples. The well-intended policies continued in the 1970s and 1980s with the closure of children’s homes, in a desire for children to be raised by families, following disclosure of abuse in residential care and Goffman’s work on asylums. This policy shift was not based on children’s outcomes or on consultation with children. Private boarding schools, which share the same characteristics as residential institutions, have not been closed down; rather, safeguarding measures have been taken and they have maintained a standard for high-quality education.

Although England has been one of the hubs for groundbreaking and ethically conducted research in the field, reforms were mostly borne out of high-profile cases that involved the death of a child rather than evidence based. They led to a ‘risk-oriented’ culture set out in a document of just over 100 pages and a few thousand pages of appendices. As a result, childhood, which is essentially a space of trial and error, became a red-tape exercise. This makes care a disempowering experience for the young people it aims to protect, and one which hinders the development of their autonomy. Unsurprisingly, this system is marked by a low retention rate for social workers, stressed professionals and children whose sense of worth has been eroded by frequent changes of foster families, schools and social workers. In addition to these systemic flaws and challenges, the last ten years have seen a significant rise in the number of children in care, and budget cuts as well. Moreover, the lack of children’s homes, which some children prefer, has pushed many young people into unregulated accommodation.

Voices from the Silent Cradles, based on 40 life history interviews with young people who grew up in care in Romania or were adopted in and from Romania, suggests that it was the quality of care that had an impact on young people’s lives, and not whether it was residential or foster care. This finding is similar to a longitudinal study conducted in Ireland.

The results for the young people who entered adulthood from different types of care were mixed. An exception was those who were adopted in Romania who were able to overcome inherent challenges posed by adoption and whose lives were no different than those of any other young people who never entered care and had supportive parents. Most of the young people who were adopted internationally continued to have identity struggles in their (late) 20s. Irrespective of the age at which they were adopted, their Romanian identity was an important element of who they were, and for most of them, their adoption experience became an invisible barrier to achieving stable careers or stable and healthy relationships. Mixed experiences were reported also by those who grew up in foster care. Some felt that they belonged to their foster homes; others experienced foster care as an isolating, disempowering and ‘unbelonging’ experience that led them into depression and troubled adulthood. Those who left unhappy foster placements to go into kinship care, residential care or other arrangements, did better in the long run compared to those who stayed in those placements until they became 18. Perhaps the most surprising outcomes were those related to residential care. Because they were able to stay in care beyond age 18, some went to university while others took (sometimes precarious) jobs before getting a stable one. Most of them benefitted from the support of child protection staff to get apprenticeships during their teenage years or developed hobbies with mentors they met during their time in care. Having had a personal relationship with a staff member or mentor was crucial to how they experienced residential care. The striking difference was in their personal life. Those placed in institutions at birth did not speak of any romantic relationship before the age of 25. In contrast, most of those who went into children’s homes a few years later were married or in long-term relationships or had experienced romantic relationships. The overall findings of the study confirm Bronfenbrenner’s statement that every child needs at least one adult who is crazy about him or her. The good news is that it is never too late to overcome early adversity with the right support, if the right carer or mentor is found.

Less bureaucracy and more state support in adoption processes

The Ministry of Labor announced that the Government approved on Wednesday the Methodological Norms for the application of the Adoption Law, which makes the procedures more flexible and increases the state support provided to the adoptive families.

According to a communiqué of the Ministry of Labor, the normative act ensures equitable access for entry on the lists in the matching process for all adopters or adoptive families, establishing a single ranking criterion, namely the seniority of the certificates. It also provides for the obligation to notify the adopter or adoptive family of the outcome of the match, the reasons why the practical matching procedure has not been initiated and the setting of a deadline for this.

„The document adopted today also establishes the procedure for granting the monetary rights provided by Law no. 268/2020, respectively the support allowance and the fixed amount in the amount of 1,500 lei, through the payment and social inspection agencies of the county and of the municipality of Bucharest ”, it is also shown in the communiqué.

According to him, considering the extension of the validity of the certificate from 2 years to 5 years, the norms of application of the law establish the procedure of annual verification of the fulfillment of the conditions that were the basis for the issuance of the certificate. The verification involves at least a visit to the home of the adopter / adoptive family and a psychological counseling session at least 60 days before the deadline of one year from the issuance of the certificate or, as the case may be, from the last assessment.

Excessive bureaucratization of certain stages of the adoption process will be eliminated

Adopted children from China recognize their native language

Children aged 4 to 10 who have been adopted from China and who no longer know a word of Chinese have been shown to have stored a basic knowledge of their native language. This knowledge can be activated in young children. This baggage may even help in later years when they want to learn a Chinese language again.

Linguists Wencui Zhou, Mirjam Broersma and Anne Cutler of Tilburg University and Radboud University Nijmegen write this in the journal Cognition . They demonstrate this unconscious knowledge in children for Cantonese and Mandarin, so-called tonal languages ??with properties that Dutch does not know.

The linguists tested 46 children who were adopted when they were between nine months and 4.5 years old. As a test group, they set 47 non-adopted Dutch children against this. The subjects were on average seven years old.

The researchers visited all the children at home to have them take individual tests. Mirjam Broersma: 'The tasks are as playful as possible to motivate the children.' On a screen you see a panda mother with two panda babies. For example, the mother says the Chinese sound 'atshhhé'. Then one screen baby repeats 'atshhhé', the other 'atsé'; the test children have to say which baby says the same thing as the mother and which doesn't. If the test child gives the correct answer, flowers will appear and the baby panda will jump up and down.

Tone language

Domestic adoption bill en route to Senate after House approval

MANILA - The House of Representatives on Wednesday approved on final reading House Bill 8998 or the proposed "Domestic Adoption Act", without rejection from any lawmaker.

The bill will be sent to the Senate for approval.

According to the congressional fact sheet, the proposed measure seeks to streamline and hasten the domestic adoption process, to establish the policies and rules on domestic administrative adoption, and eliminate the judicial phase of adoption.

It provides for pre-adoption services by the local government units and child-caring agencies to prevent the child’s separation from the biological parents.

It prescribes rules on who may adopt, who may be adopted and whose consent is necessary to the adoption.

Tokyo Olympics: Adopted from China, Canada’s Maggie MacNeil wins gold and Chinese social media laments its one-child policy

The 21-year-old’s victory in the 100m butterfly forces introspection given she was abandoned by her biological parents as a baby

Netizens lament the circumstances that forced the swimming star out of her birth nation, but are full of praise for those who raised and trained her

An adopted Chinese girl captured Canada’s first gold medal at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and it sparked outcry in China’s domestic media over its now-scrapped one-child policy.

On Monday, Canada’s Maggie MacNeil – who was born in China – garnered worldwide fame as she was crowned Olympic champion ahead of China’s Zhang Yufei, the top-ranked swimmer in the women’s 100m butterfly.

Zhang had to settle for the silver medal in a time of 55.64 seconds, while MacNeil was 0.05 seconds ahead.

Mother and Baby Homes: Two test cases to be heard by High Court later this year

TWO TEST CASES involving Mother and Baby Home survivors seeking judicial reviews are set to be heard by the High Court later this year.

The two cases, being brought by high-profile survivors Philomena Lee and Mary Harney, will be heard in late October or November.

Eight women, some of whom cannot be named, are seeking judicial reviews of the final report of the Commission of Investigation into Mother and Baby Homes.

A third test case, involving Mari Steed, may also proceed at a later date. A discovery motion to receive certain documents related to the case is likely to be made by Steed’s legal team in the coming weeks.

A test case is one brought forward that would then set a precedent for future similar cases.

Sebastian is looking for his mother after a hard adoption report: 'Maybe not abandoned after all'

The Hague PVV member Sebastian Kruis was adopted as a baby from Colombia and feels happy and at home in the Netherlands. Yet, after a damning report on international adoptions, he sets out in search of his biological family. "I feel a bit like I'm actually too late."

Two years ago, he wasn't there yet. Hagenaar Sebastian Kruis made a trip to his native country for the first time in 23 years, but did not feel called to search for his biological family in the capital Medellin. "The adoption is the most beautiful thing that has happened to me in my life," said the PVV member in a political interview that became surprisingly personal. “It has given me a future and a mother. And also the nicest one around.”

Perhaps Kruis would still be quite laconic about his roots in Colombia, had it not been for a damning investigative report this year about adoptions from his native country, among others. Former top civil servant Tjibbe Joustra put the finger on abuses that had lasted for decades: corruption, child trafficking, forgery of documents and even child theft. Painful too: the Dutch government looked away for years.

"There had been signs for years that a lot had gone wrong with adoptions , but I have always taken that for granted," Sebastian Kruis says on a sunny summer terrace in Scheveningen. “This isn't about me, I thought. But I simply can't keep up after that hard report."

Why not?

Child-Trafficking Racket Busted In Odisha, Seven Arrested

All seven, including five women, hail from "well-to-do families" that operate businesses of their own in the steel city, Bikram Keshari Bhoi, the additional superintendent of police (ASP), Rourkela, said.

Rourkela: A child-trafficking racket has been busted with the arrest of seven persons, and a one-and-a-half year-old girl rescued from their clutches, a senior police officer said on Tuesday.

All seven, including five women, hail from "well-to-do families" that operate businesses of their own in the steel city, Bikram Keshari Bhoi, the additional superintendent of police (ASP), Rourkela, said.

The eighth member of the racket, also a woman, is at large, and the police are on the lookout for her, he said.

"This has been a real revelation ... We are not going to leave anything to chance and find out all about this illegal activity. We will investigate every possible angle that might be involved, including organ trade," Bhoi asserted.

Sebastian is looking for his mother after a hard adoption report: 'Maybe not abandoned after all'

Two years ago, he wasn't there yet. Hagenaar Sebastian Kruis made a trip to his native country for the first time in 23 years, but did not feel called to search for his biological family in the capital Medellin. "The adoption is the most beautiful thing that has happened to me in my life," said the PVV MP in a political interview that became surprisingly personal. ,,It has given me a future and a mother. And also the nicest one around.”