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NCPCR to audit decision for need to put children in shelter homes

There are nearly 3.8 lakh children living in over 9,500 childcare institutions-run by state governments and NGOs in the country.

NEW DELHI: India’s apex child rights body has flagged the issue of a large number of children in various states being made to live in shelter homes “unnecessarily” by district child welfare committees.

The Commission has now decided to audit the decisions by the CWCs to declare the kids as “children in need of care and protection”, which paves the way for them being put in shelter homes where they often face neglect, sub-standard care and even abuse.

There are nearly 3.8 lakh children living in over 9,500 childcare institutions-run by state governments and NGOs in the country.

Officials in the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights said in its statutory meeting recently, it was highlighted that many CWCs are defaulting in declaring children as CNCP before sending them to shelter homes. The Commission has therefore decided that a fact-finding exercise will be carried to examine the decisions taken by the CWCs.

’My Faith in Americans is Renewed with every Adoption’: Transnational and Transracial Adoptions in Postwar America

American writer Pearl. S. Buck, winner of the Nobel Prize for literature, addressed the black readership of Ebony magazine in June 1958 by asking “Should white parents adopt brown babies?” Buck herself had founded the adoption agency “Welcome House” in 1949 and was an early advocate for adoptions from Asian countries. She had also adopted the Afro-German girl Henriette in 1951. Deeply committed to humanitarian activism as well as highly critical of social welfare practices, she addressed African-American families in the Ebony article and encouraged them to adopt, though she reasoned that children needed love and a nurturing home, not so much a “match” in terms of race or culture. The African American public, too, was deeply concerned about black German children born in the aftermath of 1945, and as early as 1946, the first reports about them appeared in the black press. Another female “non-professional” adoption advocate who wanted to bring these children to the US was Mabel A. Grammer, a journalist for the Baltimore Afro-American and the wife of a GI stationed in Germany. The Grammer’s had adopted several Afro-German children themselves, and Mabel Grammer initiated what she called the “Brown Baby Plan” in the late 1940s (Alexis Clark, „Overlooked No More: Mabel Grammer, Whose Brown Baby Plan Found Homes for Hundreds“).For Grammer, her activism was deeply political; a means to overcome the discriminatory practices of domestic adoption agencies (McRoy Zurcher. Transracial and Inracial Adoptees). Her writings for the Baltimore Afro-American illustrate that the “Brown Baby Plan” was a means to circumvent the discriminations African Americans faced by domestic adoption agencies, as well as an articulation of their humanitarian concerns. Being confronted with images of the normative American family (white, middle-class, with a male breadwinner and a female homemaker), the family became exactly the site where inequalities were painfully experienced (Potter. Everybody Else: Adoption and the Politics of Domestic Diversity in Postwar America). Far from being a private constellation, the postwar family was acutely political; through her adoption efforts, Grammer therefore exposed the classed, gendered, and raced notions of this family ideal. Viewed in this light, her activism also underscores the political dimension of constructed kinship formations.

The late 1940s and early 1950s witnessed the emergence of so-called “intercountry adoptions” to the United States. These transnational adoptions, which often happened to be transracial as well, were regarded as deviant, unconventional, or revolutionary. They subverted the premise of “matching,” that is finding a match between children and parents in terms of race, religion, or mental capacity (McRoy Zurcher. Transracial and Inracial Adoptees). Mabel Grammer and Pearl Buck received wide and favourable media coverage for her humanitarian commitment. However, the International Social Service (ISS) and the Child Welfare League of America (CWLA) were highly critical of their reliance on proxy adoptions that did not involve social workers or a supervisory period for the newly established families. Buck and Grammer framed adoption as a humanitarian paradigm, closely related to war, occupation and sexual violence. In fact, US-American soldiers sent to Europe during or after the Second World War, and eventually to Korea, produced significant numbers of children in those countries. The fate of these “half-American” children, often identified as “racially mixed” and many of them discriminated against in their home country, attracted wide media attention in the United States. This coverage coincided with a “shortage” of healthy white babies and hence increased demand for “adoptable” children by American couples. In order to facilitate the emerging practice of international adoptions into the United States, the US immigration law broadened the definition of “orphan” considerably; from 1953, a child with two living parents could be categorized as an orphan. These children were obviously regarded as ideal immigrants and citizens, since they could be raised to become “true Americans” in the Cold War era.

The internationalism of the postwar period as well as the galvanizing civil rights movement and a belief in colorblind social policies challenged standard procedures such as “matching.” The public discussions and controversies that transnational and transracial adoptions elicited reflect the paradoxes inherent in American family formation and the formation of the American nation. On the one hand a liberal pluralist understanding – families can be made through voluntary association, a nation can be made through immigration and naturalization; and on the other hand the belief that blood ties determine belonging – into the family as well as into the nation. Especially transracial adoptions touched upon these notions in new and challenging ways. It was within this historical context, I argue, that discourses on civil rights, on idealized notions of “the American family,” on citizenship as well as Cold War rhetoric all intersected in the social practice that is transnational and transracial adoptions. This project is guided by several research questions: Why did these transnational and transracial adoptions generate such a huge media coverage, despite their relatively small numbers in the early years of international adoption, what were the larger political and cultural issues and sentiments these adoptions touched upon? Why did white Americans consider adopting a child from Korea, but not a racially mixed child out of the US foster system, why was the benevolent rhetoric of color blindness, multiracial families and child rescue not extended to these American children? Lastly, why were the ISS and the CWLA so critical of Buck and Grammer, how did they react to these “adoption activists”?

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Child Abuse, Trafficking Probe Targets Romanian Program Led By German Couple

Child Abuse, Trafficking Probe Targets Romanian Program Led By German Couple

August 28, 2019 05:31 GMT

Romanian authorities say they have busted a human trafficking and child slavery ring in the country’s northwestern Maramures county.

The Directorate for Investigating Organized Crime and Terrorism (DIICOT) on August 27 raided eight houses as part of an investigation into eight people on suspicion of trafficking and abusing German children who were allegedly beaten and kept in slavelike conditions.

The children, aged 12 to 18 years, were allegedly deprived of food and forced to do exhausting work. Some of them tried to kill themselves, the Romania Journal reported.

Adoption gone awry: Four parents, but no home for 11-year-old

AHMEDABAD: Call it the parent of all paradoxes: an 11-year-old girl (https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/11-year-old-girl)

who has biological as well as adoptive parents has been sent to a child protection home

(https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/child-protection-home). While the adoptive parents have taken a moral stand and

want to return the child to her real mother and father, the biological parents have no legal standing to take back their daughter.

In this case of adoption gone (https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/adoption-gone) awfully awry

Romanian prosecutors probe abuse of German teens

Authorities in Romania are investigating a social program for troubled youths, who were allegedly kept in "slavery-like conditions." A German couple is being investigated for human trafficking.

Romania's Directorate for Investigating Organized Crime and Terrorism opened an investigation into eight individuals suspected of mistreating German children. The agency carried out a search of the suspects' homes on Tuesday.

Authorities said a German couple was part of the individuals being investigated. All suspects, who have not yet been arrested, were involved with "Projekt Maramures," a "social program" financed by the German state and licensed by Romania's Labor Ministry.

Projekt Maramures sought to "rehabilitate" troubled German children and teenagers aged between 12 and 18 through recreational activities and psychological assistance. It was located in the northern rural Romanian region of Maramures.

But its founders are being investigated for allegedly forcing teenagers aged between 12 and 18 to "do exhausting physical labor" in numerous households.

Girl’s biological parents are equally distraught

Ahmedabad: An adoption that began with the intention of embracing a girl who was either orphaned or abandoned, turned out

to be rather traumatic for the child along with her biological and adoptive parents.

While the 11-year-old girl is back to the orphanage she was adopted from, her biological parents have been making rounds of

government offices to secure custody of their daughter and the adoptive parents have had to file a case to invalidate the

adoption, so that the girl can be handed over to her biological parents.

Newborn child trafficked for Rs 3 lakh, rescued by police

Born to a rape victim, grandparents of the child refuse to accept him

Mahesh Sharma|

Mandi Ahmedgarh, August 27

The newborn son of a rape victim, who was allegedly sold to a Dehradun-based family for Rs 3 lakh, has been rescued but nobody is ready to accept him.

While his biological father is behind the bar for allegedly raping his mother, the parents of the victim are not ready to accept him fearing social stigma.

Jugendhilfe Rumänien

Youth Aid Romania

Contact

If you would like more information or to send us suggestions, please contact:

Jonas Schäfer, Werkschule Jugendhof Cund

Tel & Fax +40 265 714395

Inter-state child-selling racket: CWC refuses to grant custody to couple who ‘purchased’ child

The CWC has also refused to allow the couple to visit the two-year-old boy, who was sent to Bal Anand, a specialised adoption agency in July, when the racket was busted.

THE MUMBAI Child Welfare Committee (CWC) has refused to grant permanent or temporary custody to a couple who had allegedly purchased one of the six children rescued by the Mumbai police from an inter-state child-selling racket. The CWC has also refused to allow the couple to visit the two-year-old boy, who was sent to Bal Anand, a specialised adoption agency in July, when the racket was busted.

“The committee is mindful of the fact that incidents of child trafficking is rampantly increasing. Children are being trafficked under the garb of adoption, from hospitals, nursing homes and institutions that do not figure in the adoption set up at all. The committee cannot encourage the practice of illegal adoption,” the CWC stated, while rejecting the application filed by the couple earlier this month.

The boy, along with five others, all aged between 18 months and seven years, were rescued by the Mumbai Police crime branch in July and, as per orders of the CWC, sent to Bal Anand.

The police claimed that the couple and others, from whose custody the children were rescued, had not completed any legal formalities to adopt the children. The “adoptive” parents were arrested in July and later granted bail by the sessions court.

Adoption jokes are not ok, and here’s why

It all started when a Facebook user Sandhya was browsing multiple online gifting sites for Rakshabandhan this year, and came across a website that sold ‘combo’ gift items for siblings. All that was fine, of course, except that there were some products designed and marketed in a way that specifically addressed one of the siblings as an adopted child, and in a manner that many found to be derogatory.

At a time when the concept of adoption is still not very well accepted in our society, the last thing we need is people making fun of an issue that has so many layers and is such a sensitive one for many. To trivialise it or pass ‘cool’ jokes around adoption, which is often overwhelming for families going through it, is just not done.

As Sandhya delved deeper and did more research, she found that there were a number ofother websites which had similar products and she took it upon her to bring it to the attention of these sites, pointing out that they were actually hurting the sentiments of adoptive parents.

One of the companies indulging in selling such products was OyeHappy. The products listed ranged from magnets, picture stands, mugs and rakhis. Each one of them carried a text where one of the children was a natural sibling and the other an ‘adopted’ one — the latter, mostly represented by a caricature that looked subdued.

Sandhya and many others are part of a Facebook group which addresses and discusses the issues, concerns and life of adoptive parents. She brought this to the attention of the Facebook group which joined together to pull such product listings off the website.