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Catholic Charities of Baltimore ends international adoption program

BALTIMORE (CNS) -- After more than 75 years helping form families through international adoption, Catholic Charities of Baltimore has closed its international adoption program.

The agency cited changing circumstances within other countries and a "negative stance" toward international adoption from the U.S. government.

Ellen Warnock, who has worked in the international adoption program for 36 years, called the Sept. 30 decision "heartbreaking" but necessary due to a dramatic decline in the number of children annually entering the United States for adoption.

In the early 2000s, more than 23,000 children came into the country each year for adoption. In 2019, that number declined to just 2,900.

"Some of the countries are either unwilling to send children overseas because it's a national pride issue or because the infrastructure that they have is such that it cannot meet the documentation standards of our government's immigration process," said Warnock, associate administrator at Catholic Charities' Center for Family Services.

Mumbai: After falling in trap, adoptive parents set up foundation to clean up system

Mumbai: After falling in trap, adoptive parents set up foundation to clean up system

TNN | Oct 26, 2020, 07.13 AM IST

Mumbai: After falling in trap, adoptive parents set up foundation to clean up system

MUMBAI: Delhi residents Abhinav Aggarwal and his wife, awaiting custody of their four-year-old son after a city civil court earlier this month declared them his adoptive parents, launched a foundation on Sunday to streamline the adoption system and create awareness.

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Attack at Supreme Court

About a dozen of women on Friday October 23, attacked and beat up Madam Maria Morgan Luyken, accused of trafficking over 550 Liberian children out of the country to the United States at the entrance of the Cafeteria at the Temple of Justice.

She had gone into the cafeteria to speak to her lawyer before the final verdict in the child trafficking case against her. It was at that point that she was intercepted by supporters of the mothers who have filed the child trafficking case against her.

It took the efforts of court securities and others to rescue her from lynching by the angry women.

The beating up of Maria Morgan Luyken on the grounds of the Supreme Court came hours before a child trafficking guilty verdict was handed down against her at the Criminal Court “B”.

The incident on Friday, is a clear example of how the country appears to be sliding into lawlessness. Attacking a person on the grounds of the Temple of Justice is prohibited here.

Orphanages, communist ghettos

Ceausescu's dictatorship killed thousands of children in orphanages. Post-communist samsars made fortunes by selling souls abroad under the authority of the authorities.

In the first days after the fall of communism and then for years in a row, the local but especially the international press made shocking reports about children in Romania suffering from AIDS, about children in orphanages and about the so-called "street children". All of them had in common Ceausescu's camps populated with the souls of the innocent. According to UNICEF, 700 orphanages housed about 100,000 children. The foreign press published hundreds of reports from orphanages in which 60% of children abandoned in maternity hospitals and hospitalized in these ghettos, with very serious disabilities, died after two or three years. Malnutrition and poor health care, lack of drugs or the interest of doctors were the main causes of childhood morbidity. Those who escaped until they became adults and were thrown into the streets from those establishments were left with lifelong sequelae. Some of them managed to find a job and integrate socially, but most were expelled or discriminated against by society, as is still the case today to a large extent with any minority: ethnic, religious, sexual and more. . Others, on the periphery of society, became criminals, victims of the demographic policy of the communist dictatorship that banned abortions. Thousands of children died, thousands of women died who tried to get rid of pregnancy by old methods, some of them downright barbaric. as is still the case today to a large extent with any minority: ethnic, religious, sexual and more. Others, on the periphery of society, became criminals, victims of the demographic policy of the communist dictatorship that banned abortions. Thousands of children died, thousands of women died who tried to get rid of pregnancy by old methods, some of them downright barbaric. as is still the case today to a large extent with any minority: ethnic, religious, sexual and more. Others, on the periphery of society, became criminals, victims of the demographic policy of the communist dictatorship that banned abortions. Thousands of children died, thousands of women died who tried to get rid of pregnancy by old methods, some of them downright barbaric.

In 1990 I went with a colleague from the magazine where I was working at an orphanage in Bucharest on Christmas Eve. The children camped on sweets and clothes bought with the help of colleagues, pulled on sweaters, pants, socks, those who managed to get their hands on an item of clothing ran away and hid under the rusty iron beds. And they never left. Many of them were naked, naked, with only skin and bone. When we wanted to leave, they encamped us in bunches, they held our clothes, they prayed for us to stay. "Take me in your arms, take me home with you," they prayed. Some swayed in one on rusty beds, suffered from autism, behavioral disorders or other mental illnesses. Inside, he smelled of urine, unwashed laundry, and baby sweat.

The orphanages were littered with rats, the children were starving, cold, washed with a cold water hose. But the caregivers took it well, took the food from the children's mouths, and so as not to be interrupted by crocheting, they beat them like animals. After December ’89, trucks with food and clothing from the West began to arrive. Many stopped at the gates of the orphanages. But the children were still starving and naked, because humanitarian aid was being handed over and taken home by the staff of those ghettos, from the director to the caregivers and doctors.

Children in orphanages, a commodity for soul mates

Anupama will get her baby back, govt must monitor all adoptions strictly, say experts

Kozhikode: It is almost certain that the Thiruvananthapuram child missing case will get

embroiled in legal battle in the coming days as the state government has approached

Vanchiyoor Family Court to ensure justice.

Anupama S Chandran, a former member of SFI and the daughter of a Peroorkada CPI-M

area committee member Jayachandran, came up with the allegations against her family

A Love Beyond Borders Temporary Suspension Lifted

Lifted

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A Love Beyond Borders Temporary Suspension Lifted

Last Updated: October 22, 2019

This Notice Supersedes the October 4, 2019 Notice.

Delhi: Bail to childless man who paid money for infant

NEW DELHI: An infant, multiple traffickers and a childless couple– these have reflected in an order relating to the bail of a Delhi man who, along with his wife, paid money to become a parent. The infant was sold by her parents who reportedly had two disabled children and couldn’t afford to take care of her. She was trafficked by several middlepersons and eventually reached a childless couple who paid Rs 1 lakh for her.

The arrested prospective father sought bail stating that he meant well. Though granted bail, the court said that it was due to these “well-meaning” individuals that the child trafficking racket existed. “Sale and purchase of human beings as chattels is to be condemned no matter how pious the intention,” noted additional sessions judge Neelofer Abida Perveen.

A case stemming from the statement of a Delhi Women’s Commission councillor showed that the biological parents had sold their two-and-a-half-month-old daughter, who was born in May, 2020, with the help of a nurse. The couple wanted to “save her future” by giving her away to a “rich family”.

The child was sold to two women for Rs 40,000, and then sold again to someone else via a woman. Another trafficker sold her to the accused man and his wife. The infant was found at the accused’s home on August 13 when police found out that the couple had paid money to bring the child home.

In order to declare their guardianship over the child, the couple organised a family function. The counsel, who appeared for the man booked under Section 370 for “exploitation,” argued that all he wanted was to give the infant a good life as a daughter. The man and his wife had no ill-will or maleficence as they intended to legally adopt the child, it was argued. The money, the counsel added, was given on “humanitarian grounds” to the biological parents and not as a consideration for adoption.

HC cancels ‘forcible’ adoption of boy, gives custody to mother

CHANDIGARH: The Punjab and Haryana high court has made it clear that a child who is being taken to a far off country by way of adoption needs to be protected and added that background checks by the Central Adoption Resource Authority (CARA) and its equivalent authority in the foreign country are imperative in the case of an inter-country adoption.

Deciding the ongoing battle over adoption of a minor boy to a couple based in the United States under “pressure” of his grandparents after his father’s death, the Punjab and Haryana high court directed the adoptive parents to hand over the custody of the child to his natural mother.

The high court held that the adoption deed shown to be executed on December 3, 2019 is a highly suspicious document as regards its authenticity and secondly, the intention to give the child for adoption was at a time when the petitioner could not be said to be in a stable mental state due to the recent death of her husband.

As the child remained with the adoptive couple, the high court observed that the couple must have been attached with the child, thus it would be appropriate in the interest of the child if the adoptive mother hands over the child by first familiarising him with his natural mother. The process has been ordered to be completed over a period of two weeks

The matter had reached the high court in January this year after a Chandigarh-based woman (name withheld to protect identity) filed a habeas corpus petition alleging that her minor son had been forcibly taken away from her custody through “forceful” adoption by her in-laws after her husband’s death. She said her father in law and mother in law had called her to Patiala in September 2019 and forced her to sign some documents after which her son was given in adoption to the USA-based couple. She approached the HC after the Chandigarh police failed to take any action on her complaint.

Mother and Baby Home Commission records: An EU Law Perspective

It is critical that the state does not compound an administrative error being made by the Commission of Investigation into Mother and Baby Homes and Certain Related Matters, in failing to take account of its duties under the Charter of Fundamental Rights and GDPR to set aside any national provision which would conflict with the rights of access and other data protection rights.

The Commissions of Investigation Act 2004 has been superseded by the GDPR and the Data Protection Act of 2018. Its provisions providing for secrecy cannot be applied by any emanation of the state where they conflict with either Article 15 rights of access or Article 18 rights of the data subject to restrict any proposed processing.

In addition, the proposal to ‘seal’ the archive of documents to be presented to the Minister for 30 years is simply impermissible under EU law. Even where national legislation allows for restrictions on data subjects’ rights, those restrictions must be tightly limited and necessary for an overriding purpose of national importance.

The collective body of all the data protection authorities, the European Data Protection Board (EDPB) has, on the 2nd June 2020, issued a policy document setting out the limits of permissible national legislation restricting GDPR rights (see EDPB, ‘Statement on restrictions on data subject rights in connection to the state of emergency in Member States’, adopted on 2 June 2020, https://edpb.europa.eu/our-work-tools/our-documents/autre/statement-restrictions-data-subject-rights-connection-state_en).

The EDPB confirmed:

'Bake Off Flanders' candidate Asha was adopted at a young age: "I still don't know why they gave us up"

'Bake Off' candidate Asha Schraepen likes to emphasize her Indian roots with her colorful pastries. She and her twin sister were barely one year old when they arrived in Belgium. 'I don't need to find my biological parents.'

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Met haar kleurrijke gebakjes zet ‘Bake Off’-kandidate Asha Schraepen haar Indiase roots graag in de verf. Zij en haar tweelingzus waren amper één jaar oud toen ze in België terechtkwamen. ‘Mijn biologische ouders vinden, daar heb ik geen behoefte aan.’