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Bangladesh launches investigation into children ‘wrongly’ adopted overseas

Bangladesh launches investigation into children ‘wrongly’ adopted overseas

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Police start to interview witnesses following Guardian reports on adoptions to the Netherlands nearly 50 years ago

Read more: ‘I was told I could visit. Then she went missing’: the Bangladeshi mothers who say their children were adopted without consent

 

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBAY ORDINARY ORIGINAL CIVIL JURISDICTION AND IN ITS GENERAL AND INHERENT JURISDICTION INDIAN ADOPTION PETITION NO. 20 OF 2023 WITH JUDGE’S ORDER NO. 38 OF 2023 IN INDIAN ADOPTION PETITION NO. 20 OF 2023

1-IAP-20-2023.doc Vina Khapde (P.S.) IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBAY ORDINARY ORIGINAL CIVIL JURISDICTION AND IN ITS GENERAL AND INHERENT JURISDICTION INDIAN ADOPTION PETITION NO. 20 OF 2023 WITH JUDGE’S ORDER NO. 38 OF 2023 IN INDIAN ADOPTION PETITION NO. 20 OF 2023 Bal Asha Trust, Mumbai …Petitioner Versus 1. Ashu Singhal 2. Riddhi Singhal …Prospective Adoptive Parents / Respondents ---------- Mr. Rakesh Kapoor i/b. M/s. Rakesh K. L. Kapoor & Co. for the Petitioner. Mr. O. Hareendran, Scrutiny Officer, Indian Council of Social Welfare present. Mr. Dilip S. Gurav, Chamber Registrar present. Mr. Sunil Kumar Arora, Executive Director of Bal Asha Trust, Mumbai present. ---------- CORAM : R.I. CHAGLA J DATE : 25 January 2024 ORDER : 1. This Application is made by way of Affidavit dated 19th December 2023 which is taken on record. By the said Affidavit, the 1/7 2024:BHC-OS:1809 ::: Uploaded on - 01/02/2024 ::: Downloaded on - 06/02/2024 11:18:50 ::: VERDICTUM.IN 1-IAP-20-2023.doc relief has been sought with regard to annulment of Adoption order passed by this Court on 17th August 2023, and for directions to the Central Adoption Resource Authority (CARA) to re-register Ganesh @ Karthik Singhal (“the said male minor child”) as ‘Free for Adoption’ for identifying suitable prospective adoptive parents at the earliest. Further direction has been sought with regard to the investment of Rs.2,00,000/- which has been made in the said male minor child’s name for his benefit by the said adoptive parents as directed by this Court vide order dated 17th August 2023. 2. Mr. O. Hareendran, Scrutiny Officer has tendered the Report of the Indian Council of Social Welfare dated 16th January 2024 which is taken on record and marked ‘x’ for identification. 3. By order dated 17th August 2023, this Court had granted adoption of the said male minor child to the adoptive parents by Judge’s Order No.38 of 2023 in Indian Adoption Petition No.20 of 2023. This was pursuant to a joint Petition filed by the Specialized Adoption Agency (Petitioner-Institution) and the said adoptive parents. 4. Thereafter, the said male minor child’s physical custody 2/7 ::: Uploaded on - 01/02/2024 ::: Downloaded on - 06/02/2024 11:18:50 ::: VERDICTUM.IN 1-IAP-20-2023.doc was given to the adoptive parents after the adoptive parents had completed all due procedures under Adoption Regulations Chapter III. 5. In the said Affidavit dated 19th December 2023 filed and affirmed by Mr. Sunil Kumar Arora, Executive Director of Bal Asha Trust (Petitioner-Institution), it is stated that 5 months after the adoption Petition was allowed on 17th August 2023, the adoptive parents complained to the Petitioner-Institution about uncontrollable bad behaviour and habits of the said male minor child. 6. The Petitioner-Institution advised the adoptive parents to undergo counseling sessions in order to understand the said male minor child’s behaviourial issues better and try remedial measures to address the alleged behaviourial issues of the said male minor child. The Petitioner-Institution had informed all the concerned authorities i.e. the Central Adoption Resource Authority (CARA), State Adoption Resource Authority (SARA), District Child Protection Unit (DCPU), and Specialized Adoption Agency (SAA) who prepared home study report by email dated 19th October 2023 about the adoptive parents’ inability to keep and take care of the said male minor child. 3/7 ::: Uploaded on - 01/02/2024 ::: Downloaded on - 06/02/2024 11:18:50 ::: VERDICTUM.IN 1-IAP-20-2023.doc 7. Thereafter, as per the instructions of the PetitionerInstitution the adoptive parents underwent their first Counseling Session with the Counselor of Specialized Adoption Agency “Bharatpuria Shiksha Samiti” Ghaziabad, U.P. on 28th October 2023. In this counseling session, the adoptive parents informed that they observed the overeating behaviour of the said male minor child and found that the said male minor child was picking food from the dustbin etc. After this incident, they took the said male minor child to the pediatrician and the Doctor suggested few blood tests. They conducted all the blood tests and it has been revealed that the said male minor child has borderline levels of Leptin and Diabetes. Further, the Doctor opined that the said male minor child may be suffering from obesity and other health issues related to diabetes. The first counseling session and blood test reports have been placed on record at page nos.13 to 28 to the said Affidavit. 8. The second counseling session took place on 18th November 2023 and the Counselor found that the adoptive parents are not ready to keep the said male minor child as their own and take necessary remedial measures to rectify certain eating habits of child. The Counselor also found the adoptive parents do not have emotional bonding with the said male minor child, though the child is fond of 4/7 ::: Uploaded on - 01/02/2024 ::: Downloaded on - 06/02/2024 11:18:50 ::: VERDICTUM.IN 1-IAP-20-2023.doc the adoptive parents and their seven year biological daughter who is an elder sibling. The second counseling report has been placed on record at page nos.29-31 to the said Affidavit. 9. On 2nd December 2023, the said adoptive parents have executed an Affidavit stating interalia that “We have not bonded with the child, hence we would like to return the child”. In the said Affidavit, the adoptive parents have stated that they are ready to follow the CARA Regulations and orders of this Court and authorities for the dissolution of this adoption. The said Affidavit has been placed on record at page nos.32-35 to the said Petition. 10. Thereafter, the said male minor child was brought back to the Petitioner Institution on 18th December 2023 by the adoptive parents. 11. The Petitioner Institution by the said Affidavit is seeking annulment of the order passed by this Court on 17th August 2023 for the best interest of the said male minor child and permitting CARA and the Petitioner-Institution to commence the process of finding another adoptive home for the said male minor child in accordance with the procedure under the Adoption Regulations. 5/7 ::: Uploaded on - 01/02/2024 ::: Downloaded on - 06/02/2024 11:18:50 ::: VERDICTUM.IN 1-IAP-20-2023.doc 12. Having considered the averments in the said affidavit as well as the report of Mr. O. Hareendran, Scrutiny Officer, Indian Council of Social Welfare, dated 16th January 2024 which is marked ‘x’ for identification, I am of the considered view that it would be in the interest of the said male minor child that the adoption order dated 17th August 2023 is annulled and consequential reliefs sought for in the said Affidavit are granted. 13. In view thereof, the following order is passed; (i) The order dated 17th August 2023 which has allowed the Indian Adoption Petition No.20 of 2023 is recalled and adoption of the said male minor child is accordingly annulled. (ii) The Central Adoption Resource Authority (CARA) is directed to re-register the said minor male child as ‘Free for Adoption’ for identifying suitable prospective adoptive parents at the earliest. (iii) The investment of Rs.2,00,000/- which has been made in the said minor male child’s name for his benefit by 6/7 ::: Uploaded on - 01/02/2024 ::: Downloaded on - 06/02/2024 11:18:50 ::: VERDICTUM.IN 1-IAP-20-2023.doc the prospective adoptive parents as directed by this Court vide order dated 17th August 2023, shall be returned to the prospective adoptive parents. (iv) The adoptive parents are directed to return to the Petitioner-Institution all the original reports and/or any other original documents pertaining to the said male minor child immediately. (v) This order is passed in the disposed of Indian Adoption Petition No.20 of 2023. (vi) Parties to act on an authenticated copy of this order. [R.I. CHAGLA J.] 7/7 ::: Uploaded on - 01/02/2024 ::: Downloaded on - 06/02/2024 11:18:50 ::: VERDICTUM.IN

Follow Hague Convention on adoption: Karnataka HC tells Indian couple in Germany

BENGALURU: The High Court of Karnataka has directed a couple from India to follow the Hague Convention and apply for a 'Conformity Certificate' for their adopted child through the German authorities as the husband is a resident of that country.

The couple had knocked on the doors of the HC seeking a direction to the District Child Protection Unit for issuing them with a 'No Objection Certificate' (NOC) and a 'Conformity Certificate'.

The couple had adopted a girl child and the adoption deed between the biological mother and the couple was registered before the sub-registrar in the district headquarters town of Chikkaballapura on March 29, 2023.

The Deputy Commissioner had also verified the deed and recommended that necessary action be taken for the adoption.

But still the District Child Protection Unit refused to grant them the NOC and Conformity Certificate.

46-year-old David has spent ten years getting to the bottom of his adoption case. True crime TV has come out of that

Is another documentary about the problems in the adoption field really needed? The short answer is yes, writes Frauke Giebner in this column.


" This should never have happened", says 46-year-old David, when, after ten years of detective work, he understands the extent of the lies in his adoption case.

And we already know that. This means that serious mistakes have been made in adoption cases from a large number of countries. Babies have been traded and lied to as orphans, and parents have been robbed of their children by so-called child harvesters. Can that story stand to be told one more time?

 


 

Exposed. Adopted. Arrived in the now.

Maya's story

 

Maja Tae Sook Dreyer , Schlicht Katharina (authors)

 

This is the story of a special woman and her self-discovery against all odds.
Maja doesn't know her parents, her birthday or her exact place of birth. Just a few weeks old, she was abandoned in Daegu (South Korea) in 1969. After two years in an orphanage in Seoul, she was placed in Germany for adoption.
Here, disturbing borderline experiences of strangeness, rejection, domestic violence, sexual assault and a suicide attempt determine her childhood.
She feels more and more clearly her unconditional will to live and her longing for belonging and a self-determined life in her new home. Therefore, the later encounter with her country of birth is not the focus of the novella. Rather, the authors illustrate in powerful scenes how Maja successfully fights for a fulfilled life despite lasting moments of inner conflict and the role her daughter, her husband and her job as a yoga teacher play in this.
It is also the story of the friendship of two women who at first glance seem very different. The past can be processed together, the present can be experienced and the future can be shaped.

We have been silent, but now we are shouting: 28 Danes have suddenly had their adoptive dream destroyed

When Social Affairs Minister Pernille Rosenkrantz-Theil closed and switched off Denmark's only adoption agency on national television on 16 January, it was with the words:

"Significant crisis", "children who should not have been adopted", "children who have been trafficked".

 

 

 

International adoption: what the inspection mission report could contain

Analysis

INFO THE CROIX. It was to be presented on Tuesday January 23, but its publication was postponed. The report of the inspection mission on international adoption raises a lot of expectations and already a little frustration, according to the members of the National Adoption Council who were entitled to a summary of the document.

  • Paula Pinto Gomes ,
  • on 01/24/2024 at 7:58 p.m.
  •  

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International adoption: what the inspection mission report could contain

Analysis

INFO THE CROIX. It was to be presented on Tuesday January 23, but its publication was postponed. The report of the inspection mission on international adoption raises a lot of expectations and already a little frustration, according to the members of the National Adoption Council who were entitled to a summary of the document.

This is a long-awaited document... which is still long overdue. Submitted to the government “at the end of September or beginning of October” , the report on international adoption from the government inspection mission has still not been made public. Tuesday January 23, the text was to be presented to the National Adoption Council (CNA) by the three inspectors general who drafted it – justice, foreign affairs and social affairs – but the latter's visit was ultimately canceled. “With the reshuffle, there is no one to bring this file to the government. There is no longer a children's secretary, comments Marie-Christine Le Boursicot, specialist in adoption issues, honorary advisor to the Court of Cassation.

The broad outlines of the report were, however, presented on Tuesday to members of the CNA and associations, by its president, Monique Limon, but not the document itself. Suffice to say that this situation generated frustration within the audience and, in particular, among adopted...


 

On Camera, UP Woman Strikes Adopted Daughter With Sickle Repeatedly

Kushinagar, UP: The visuals showed the woman using a sickle to hit the girl's neck multiple times when she approached her during household chores.


Lucknow:

A woman was seen repeatedly hitting her adopted daughter with a sickle in Uttar Pradesh. The horrifying visuals from Kushinagar district, captured from the terrace, showed the woman using a sickle to hit her neck multiple times when she approached her during household chores. It is not clear if the girl suffered any injury.

Amina Khatoon, who has no children of her own, had adopted the minor girl from a relative in West Champaran district. She has been arrested.

The girl was helping the woman while she was peeling vegetables, showed the video. She was passing tools and loitering around in free time. At one point, she sat near the woman with what looked like a book in her hands. Next moment, the woman could be seen twisting the girl's hand and attacking her with a sickle.

Forced to give up her son for adoption, she spent her whole life thinking about him. Then a DNA test reunited them.

When Kevin Heyel walked off his airplane and out of Concourse C this fall, he embraced his mother for the first time in his 58 years of life.

“Nice to finally meet you,” he said.

Barbara Kreft reached up to his 6-foot-6-inch frame and laughed, overjoyed that the baby she had been forced to give up for adoption was in her arms at last.

 

“I was worried about you,” she told him. “All the time.”