Home  

Nandita Puri: Child trafficking is a global issue

Nandita Puri: Child trafficking is a global issue

Culture December 14, 2019December 14, 2019 Ritu Jha

Nandita Puri, author and wife of the late actor Om Puri, is gearing up for her fourth book, “Jennifer”, a real-life account of a girl who is a victim of intercountry child trafficking. She says addressing the issue through her writing was important for her, as child trafficking is a global issue.

Nandita was present in an interactive session at the LIFFT India Filmostsav 2019 that has started from December 12 and will continue till December 16.

The book is supported by Against Child Trafficking (ACT), an NGO based out of Brussels and working on the issue of intercountry child adoption, explaining the intensity of the matter.

16 adopted children from Telangana returned in last 5 years: Report

Number smaller in comparison to other states. The Women and Child Welfare department yet to get updates on kids who have been returned by their adoptive parents

HYDERABAD: In a disconcerting trend, the state of Telangana has seen nearly 16 adopted children being returned to the State Adoption Resource Agency (SARA) in the last five years. The data was accessed by TNIE after National Commission for the Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR) raised an alarm in September over the nationwide trend of adopted children being returned by their adoptive parents. The NCPCR asked the states to furnish details about the children sent back by their adoptive parents.

The information has become vital, as on Dec 5, a 14-year-old girl from Karimnagar who had been officially adopted from SARA in 2014 committed suicide amidst allegations of negligence by the adoptive parents.Telangana from its end has found that nearly 16 children were returned.

The children have been sent back to government homes or the NGOs from where they are adopted under the supervision of SARA. Interestingly, the women and child welfare department is yet to get reports on the status of the children who had been returned by their adoptive parents.

Officials are trying to find out the age of kids sent back to homes. Most of them were in their adolescent age groups. Their gender and district they belonged to. They also have to check whereabouts of other adopted children as adjustment issues can spring up for any child. The number, however, is smaller compared to other states in the country. Previous reports suggest that nearly 260-odd children were returned across the country between 2017-19, with Maharashtra and Karnataka topping the charts where 56 and 25 children respectively.

Abandoned in a farm in Dahod, girl with learning disabilities adopted by US couple

VADODARA: She was abandoned in a farm in Dahod district.

Many would have given up on the girl, particularly considering the fact that she had learning disabilities, but destiny’s designs are

not for us humans to see. On Wednesday, three-year-old Stuti was adopted by a couple from the United States of America.

Bought to a children’s home in Godhra, the abandoned newborn, found herself a new set of parents in Brooke and Kent Hackman. Incidentally, Brooke from Kolkata was adopted by her foster parents based in the US. Stuti could walk much later than a normal child. With treatment and care at the children’s home, Stuti started speaking a few words and eventually master the art of walking too who were looking to adopt a girl from India especially with special needs, were given Stuti’s details.

They showed their eagerness to adopt her, she said.

Eurochild and UNICEF to develop a study on children in alternative care across the EU

Eurochild is partnering with UNICEF Regional Office for Europe & Central Asia to coordinate a 12-month study aimed at mapping data collection systems on child protection across 27 EU Member States.

There is an unacceptable lack of data on children without or at risk of losing parental care in Europe today. What data is available is typically not disaggregated, for example by age, gender, disability. Where data is available, monitoring continues to be haphazard and often relies on the work of NGOs to fill in the gaps, such as what we have tried to accomplish with our partners in the Opening Doors for Europe’s children campaign country factsheets in recent years.

For over a decade now, Eurochild has been working on addressing these gaps around data for children in alternative care. In 2009, we carried out a survey of the situation of children in alternative care in Europe through its member organisations. 30 European countries participated, including the 4 nations of the UK and Moldova. The survey was not intended to be a scientifically rigorous research exercise but rather to identify what information is readily available and to note some common trends across Europe. However, we are both pleased and worried that this survey remains relevant today.

In brief, the lack of recent quantitative data on children without or at risk of losing parental care is a major obstacle in the development and implementation of comprehensive deinstitutionalisation strategies. Indeed, the systematic collection of accurate data on the numbers and characteristics of children in care, the root causes of institutionalisation and the function of the child protection system as a whole is crucial and can help ensure better policies, improve the state’s ability to protect and promote children’s rights and lead to sustainable reforms. With these challenges in mind, in 2020 Eurochild, in partnership with UNICEF, will map the child protection data collection systems across 27 EU Member States.

The study will build on the findings of a feasibility phase, which mapped the systems and corresponding data available in 4 EU countries (Bulgaria, Estonia, France and Ireland). Importantly, this research is expected to take an advantage of the window of opportunity offered by a new EU legislature, as well as the Child Guarantee Initiative, which the incoming European Commission (2020-2024) has identified as one of its political priorities.

Fwd: Freedom of Information Request No. 19/20-080 - Acknowledgement [SEC=OFFICIAL]

---------- Forwarded message ---------

From: FOI

Date: Wed, 11 Dec 2019 at 8:09 AM

Subject: Freedom of Information Request No. 19/20-080 - Acknowledgement [SEC=OFFICIAL]

To: Arun Dohle

Jharkhand sees troubling trend of babies in dump

Welfare department officials found that every month, 'one or two babies abandoned mostly by unwed mothers'

bandoned infants are being found, dead or alive, with alarming regularity in the Jharkhand capital and child protection officials don’t seem to know how to stem the disturbing pattern.

Between June and December this year, 10 newborns were reportedly found along roads, in garbage vats or in drains and activists believe this is only a conservative estimate. While abandoning the girl child is quite common in the state, many of the infants are boys and hence, perhaps born out of wedlock.

The latest rescue took place on Saturday when members of social outfit Rebels Club heard cries of a baby at Idris Colony in Kantatoli under Lower Bazaar thana.

“It must have been around 7pm. We traced the cries to a gunny bag near an apartment. Inside it was a baby boy, barely hours old. He hadn’t even been cleaned properly. We quickly arranged for clothes to protect him from the cold and informed police,” said Arzoo Khan, a member of the club who runs a garage in the area.

Jin asking access to report by ISS Fwd: Anmodning om aktindsigt

---------- Forwarded message ---------

From: Jin Vilsgaard

Date: Tue, 10 Dec 2019 at 7:26 AM

Subject: Fw: Request for access to documents

To: Arun Dohle

Adopteren uit Thailand

Adopting from Thailand

For 2020 we are looking for couples who want to start a procedure.

Are you considering adopting a child from Thailand? You can read more about this on this page. The best interests of the child always come first. Read more about this at our principles.

Wereldkinderen has been mediating for children from Thailand for over 40 years. In the past four years, 42 children from Thailand have found a home in the Netherlands through Wereldkinderen.

Background

The accused chopped Bennett Rebello, stuffed the severed body parts in three bags including a suitcase and threw away the suitcase in Mithi river in Mumbai.

The accused chopped Bennett Rebello, stuffed the severed body parts in three bags including a suitcase and threw away the suitcase in Mithi river in Mumbai.


Mumbai Police on Saturday arrested two people including a minor boy for killing a 59-year-old man and disposing body parts, chopped and stuffed in bags and a suitcase, in a river.

When the police recovered the suitcase they found the man's leg, a hand and mutilated private part inside.

Accused 19-year-old Riya (alias) and her 16-year-old boyfriend killed Bennett Rebello on November 27 at his house at Dwarka Kunj, in Mumbai's Vakola, Mahrashtra with a knife and bamboo stick.

 

E-mail to Dekker Fwd: Searches FIOM / ISS

---------- Forwarded message ---------

From: ACT

Date: Mon, 9 Dec 2019 at 4:59 PM

Subject: Searches FIOM / ISS

To: