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CBI takes over probe into Deoria home abuse case

Deoria Police, which earlier probed the case, filed a chargesheet against Girija and Kanchan. In the second FIR, seven others were charge-sheeted, said Arun Kumar Maurya, SHO, City Kotwali.

The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) has taken over the probe into alleged sexual harassment and illegal detention of girls at a shelter home in Deoria.

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The shelter home was run by an NGO, Maa Vindhyavash Prashikshina Avam Samaj Seva Sansthan. The CBI Thursday lodged FIRs against its director Girija Tripathi and her daughter and superintendent of the shelter, Kanchan Lata Tripathi, under charges of sexual harassment, human trafficking, sexual assault, adoption without following prescribed procedures, wrongful confinement and assault or criminal force to deter public servants from discharging their duty, said a CBI official. The two were arrested last year.

Deoria Police, which earlier probed the case, filed a chargesheet against Girija and Kanchan. In the second FIR, seven others were charge-sheeted, said Arun Kumar Maurya, SHO, City Kotwali.

A Love Beyond Borders Staff

Staff

Kate Bradley joined the LBB family in 2012 and is Associate Director and head of social services and Child Placement Supervisor. Her passion for adoption was sparked while completing an internship at an adoption agency during college. Kate earned a Master of Social Work degree from Washington University in St. Louis in 2005. Over the course of the past 8+ years, Kate has worked in many areas of the adoption field. She began her career as a pregnancy counselor and in 2007, shifted to assisting eager families to achieve their dreams of becoming parents through adoption. Kate and her husband have two children, Kallum and Ryann. In addition, Kate is the adoptive mom of 2 huskies. She enjoys travel, cooking, books, and the active Colorado lifestyle. “For a long time there were only your footprints & laughter in our dreams & even from such small things, we knew we could not wait to love you forever.” Brian Andreas You may contact Kate at Kate@bbinternationaladoption.com or 303-333-1572 ext. 113.

Kelly Carmody is the Executive Director of A Love Beyond Borders. She has been providing support and guidance to adoptive families since 2003 and started with A Love Beyond Borders when it opened in 2008.

Kelly is a single parent to three teenagers who were adopted; Hope from Kazakhstan and Kevin and Laura from Colombia. Her two Colombian children joined the family first through the hosting program in Colombia. She loves animals and they have three dogs and a cat. She enjoys cooking, entertaining, reading, game nights and traveling. Favorite quote: "The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams." Eleanor Roosevelt You may contact Kelly atKelly@bbinternationaladoption.com or 303-333-1572 ext. 102.

Rachael Daugherty joined the LBB staff in 2013 as a social worker and provides our home study services for Colorado families as well as placement supervisor. She has a Master’s Degree in Social Work and has worked in the field of adoption as a pregnancy counselor, international adoption case worker, and community relations coordinator. Rachael is originally from Georgia. Rachael has a little girl who loves all things pink and princessy and a son who loves to pretend to be a dragon. One of her favorite poets in Rainer Rilke so one of her life quotes has become: “Perhaps all the dragons in our lives are princesses who are only waiting to see us act, just once, with beauty and courage. Perhaps everything that frightens us is, in its deepest essence, something helpless that wants our love.” You may contact Rachael at Rachael@bbinternationaladoption.com or 303-333-1572 ext. 114.

Korea should investigate overseas adoptions

y Dr. Hanna Sofia Jung Johansson

South Korea has sent away more children for overseas adoption than any other country in history. The number of children sent away is unknown but numbers ranging from 175,000 to over 200,000 are mentioned.

The vast majority of these children were adopted during the 1970s (approximately 66,500 children) and the 1980s (approximately 23,000 children). This means that most of the children were adopted during the authoritarian regimes in Korea under Park Chung-hee and Chun Doo-hwan.

Accusations of child trafficking, child laundering and kidnapping are often heard in relation to overseas adoptions, including adoptions from South Korea. All these terms indicate that inter-country adoptions have been carried out by illegal and fraudulent means.

Numerous adoptees and families that have reunited bear witness to children being sent overseas without the parents' consent or knowledge. Despite this, the Korean government has never carried out an investigation of the children sent for overseas adoption.

Adopt legally, prospective parents told in Hanamkonda

It’s mandatory for the parents, who are willing to adopt children to follow the guidelines strictly laid down by the Central Adoption Resource Authority (CARA), District Welfare Officer B Santhosh said.

Hanamkonda: It's mandatory for the parents, who are willing to adopt children to follow the guidelines strictly laid down by the Central Adoption Resource Authority (CARA), District Welfare Officer B Santhosh said. Delivering the keynote address at a workshop on 'Adoption to the Prospective Adoptive Parents' organised by the Warangal Rural District Child Protection Unit (DCPU) at the Bala Raksha Bhavan in Hanamkonda on Thursday, he said that the rules pertaining to adoption are stringent to avoid misuse, and also aimed at the safety of children.

Sharanalayam A refuge for all

COIMBATORE: Everyone can help society in some way, it need not be monumental. A small step is enough like buying a pencil for a poor student,” says Vanitha Rangaraj, the founder trustee of Sharanalayam, a charitable non- profit government-certified organisation in Pollachi. She is affectionately known as Thaiyamma to inmates of this shelter for the abandoned and destitute.

She tells The Covaipost, “I was a college professor when my aged father came to live with me. He helped me achieve my dream of a shelter for orphaned children in January 2001. He formed a trust and gifted capital to start this institution. I began with a rented building and seven street children.”

Gradually they bought land in Kinathukadavu, where the district governor donated a building which became a home for orphans called Dhaya. “I then thought of a separate campus for mentally challenged people. This time Coimbatore Collector Muruganantham and Pollachi Sub-Collector Sundaramoorthy sanctioned land in Pollachi and it came to be called Jothi,” adds Vanitha.Sharanalayam soon expanded to include Jheevan for HIV-affected children and women, an aged people’s home, a school for autistic children called Third Eye and an adoption centre called Sweehar. Third Eye has branches in Pollachi, Coimbatore and Kinathukadavu. It is managed by Vanitha’s daughter Sharanya Rangaraj, an autism expert who trained in the US.

“Our adoption agency registered with Central Adoption Resource Authority (CARA), affiliated to Women and Child Development department, is the lone one for four districts. We send children periodically for adoption. This procedure covers legal formalities, screening of potential parents and regular feedback,” said Vanitha.Sharanalayam’s services of food, boarding, lodging and medical facilities are free. Orphaned children are educated, provided jobs and even get married from here.Vanitha now lives in the Kinathukadavu campus. “Twenty years have passed and people ask me how I did it. I credit it to my staff, family, government and the public for their help at different stages of Sharanalayam’s growth. No individual can do this alone. I am only God’s instrument. Besides, when we do cherished work problems fade,” she says.

Citing an example of help that pours in, she says that local businessmen gave discounted or credit sales, while rich and poor alike have donated several bags of rice, including ration rice for our institution’s needs. “We accept all this with love. I am so grateful for all their generosity,” says Vanitha.Her next venture is a cancer hospice with subsidised or free treatment at Sharanalayam. Her elder daughter Shruti, studying in USA, is consulting with doctors and medical fraternity to establish it this December.Sharanalayam also has old age homes for the wealthy whose income is used for bettering services. Vanitha does not accept mentally challenged persons with families. “Many families find them embarrassing and try to leave them here. We discourage such families, counsel them to care for the child or relative. Despite this, some will still be abandoned and brought to us through government sources,” says Vanitha.In two decades, Sharanalayam has seen births and deaths. Its Cradle Baby facility has nurtured many unwanted children. “This is better than dumping them in garbage bins to be mauled by dogs. These babies will find loving families through CARA,” she concludes.

Child adoption may be gaining acceptance but older and special needs kids are not

About 278 kids adopted across the country in 2017-19 were reportedly returned by their families, according to an RTI reply from CARA. Of these, a quarter of them were kids with special needs, 60 per cent were girls apart from older children with compatibility issues.

To say that Indian society today has eased into the idea of child adoption might be too simple an assumption. That said, with better awareness and evolved family setups, adoption isn’t just considered now as the recourse in the absence of biological kids. Today many people, from single parents to even those with biological children, including celebrities, are opting for adoption.

Child adoption practices in the country, however, are not exactly homogeneous. Among several personal preferences influencing the choice of the child to be adopted, is the desire for babies rather than older kids. Out of total 3374 domestic adoptions during the financial year 2018-19, 252 older children (between ages six and 18 years) were adopted by domestic parents, Central Adoption Resource Authority (CARA) informed Express Parenting. In 2017-18, about 80 per cent of kids adopted in the country were below the age of two.

Why do people adopt babies and not older kids?

Adoptive parents usually want to experience all stages of the child’s growing up years, right from infancy. This also gives them an opportunity to start with a clean slate, to mould the child with the right values and etiquette right from the beginning.

Unemployed man puts trust in God to reunite with ‘missing’ daughter

Ahmedabad couple files for annulment of her adoption; girl’s biological parents have no money to hire lawyer

Lovleen Bains & Harshraj Singh

Tribune reporters

Sahnewal/Ludhiana, Aug 28

An 11-year-old girl residing at Jugiana village in Ludhiana district went missing in May 2018, and the police had failed to trace her. She was put up for adoption in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, while she had her family back home in Punjab. In her flashbacks, she recalled her biological parents.

Kay Ann Johnson, 73, Who Studied China’s One-Child Policy, Dies

After adopting an abandoned infant from an orphanage in China, she began researching the lives of birth parents who had been forced to give up their children.

Kay Ann Johnson, an Asian studies scholar whose adoption of an infant girl from China led her to spend years researching the impact of the country’s one-child policy on rural families, died on Aug. 14 at a hospital in Hyannis, Mass. She was 73.

Her husband, Bill Grohmann, said the cause was complications of metastatic breast cancer.

Professor Johnson, who taught at Hampshire College in Amherst, Mass., was working on an oral history of a village in North China in 1991 when she adopted a three-month-old girl, Tang Li (who became known as LiLi), from an orphanage in Wuhan, a large city in Hubei Province in Central China. She and Mr. Grohmann already had a biological son.

China was more than a decade into enforcing its one-child policy, a draconian effort by the Communist government to curb the country’s population growth. The rule required families to make painful decisions about whether or not to keep their children.

Kidnapping racket: Gang used to sell infants to childless couples

Visakhapatnam: The recent child kidnapping racket (https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/racket) bust in Visakhapatnam

city has revealed that the nine-member gang (https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/gang) kidnapped children

(http://www.speakingtree.in/topics/people/children) not for ransom, but instead to earn money by selling the children to

childless couples.

Investigations into the racket have revealed that the gang had kidnapped four children in the city since 2016 and had sold them

U.S. couples adopt 2 girls

Two couples from the United States of America on Wednesday adopted two girls of Sishu Gruhas in Vijayawada. The process was made as per the guidelines of the Union Ministry of Women & Child Development’s Central Adoption Resource Authority (CARA).

Krishna District Collector A. Md. Imtiaz and Women and Child Welfare Department Project Director K. Krishna Kumari handed over the two girls to the parents who applied for the adoption of the respective girls.

“Kenya, a physically-challenged girl of Machilipatnam Sishu Gruha, has been given in adoption to a Wisconsin-based couple, Jefry Price. The same couple had previously adopted another child from Krishna district. Spoorthy, a girl of Buddavaram Sishu Gruha, has been given in adoption to a Mississippi-based couple, Lance Warren, according to Ms. Krishna Kumari.

Mr. Imtiaz said: “The girls will be given passport and Visa with immediate effect to travel along with the adopted parents. The district officials hailed the decision of the USA couples to adopt the children from the Sishu Gruhas.

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