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Indian Journalist Couple Adopts Female Infant Abandoned In Rajasthan

Journalist Couple Adopts Newborn Girl Abandoned In Rajasthan, Restores Our Faith In Humanity!

 14TH JUNE 2019

India’s struggle to eradicate the rapidly increasing atrocities against women is century old. Apart from teenage or mature women, female infants are also subjected to cruelty and ill-treatment. Although over the years, enough has been done to spread awareness, yet there are some places in India where she is not accepted and left to die in miserable circumstances, only questioning the existence of humanity.

A similar case was recently reported in the city of Rajasthan when a video of an abandoned female infant soaked in blood went viral on social media.

The video bears testimony to the barbaric mentality of people that don’t weigh women on the same pedestal.

But if the world is full of heartless ignorant people, there are few compassionate souls that restore the faith in humanity through their acts of kindness.

A journalist couple became the ray of hope for this little angel who was found lying in a mountain of garbage, in Rajasthan’s Nagaur area.

Sakshi Joshi and Vinod Kapri are the God sent couple who decided to adopt this abandoned newborn baby girl after they saw her crying in pain in a viral twitter video.

The heartbroken couple immediately inquired about her after which twitter instantly reached out to help them. They were later informed that the child was taken to JLN hospital at Nagaur, Rajasthan.

The couple later shared the child’s video on Twitter, sleeping peacefully on the hospital bed. They also mentioned that the adoption process is underway and they can soon be her legal parents.

This is how people reacted to their heartwarming gesture:

Since Vinod had earlier directed the critically acclaimed movie PIHU, someone even suggested him to name her after it

And Pihu she became…

While the little angel is still not completely out of danger, everyone’s prayers are with her and the couple

While India has a long way to go in tackling female infanticide, let’s not digress from the beautiful example Sakshi and Vinod have set in front of the whole world today. It’s a win for the girl, for the couple, for India, for humanity.

Social media is indeed a magical place which if used with positive intentions can lead to miracles like this. More power to the wonderful couple and we wish their race only grows stronger.

Delhi's shame! 19 children go missing daily

Most of them picked up for child labour, prostitution, illegal adoption & crime training, shows police data of last 10 years.

Seven-year-old Radha, the only child of her parents, went missing in 2013 from outside her residence in Delhi's Inderpuri. She was playing with her neighbourhood friends and didn't return home by late evening. Six years on, she remains untraced.

"We looked for her everywhere and approached the police as well. They filed a complaint but nothing happened," said her father Rupesh.

Similarly, 10-month-old Chhotu went missing from New Delhi Railway station in 2011 when her parents were waiting for a train to Bihar.

"All of a sudden, we realised that he is not with us. CCTV footage later showed a woman walking away with a child in her arms. But their faces were covered. After years of investigation, police said Chhotu might have been kidnapped for illegal adoption," said his mother Mamata, a resident of East Delhi's Ram Nagar. Radha and Chhotu are among 19 children that go missing from Delhi every day, according to Delhi Police's data. Of these 17 % children remain untraced, the data says. Across all age groups, the daily number of people going missing in Delhi is 60, police data of the last 10 years shows. The number for adult is 40.

Out of the 2,15,216 persons missing in Delhi since 2008, 73,675 were minors. While 60,210 missing children have been traced, 12,465 haven't been found, according to the data reviewed by Mail Today.

THE CURRENT YEAR

In 2019, till May 15, of the 2,324 missing children, 1,241 have been traced, while 1,083 remain missing. This means 46% of these kids are yet to be found.

Most of them were picked up for child labour, prostitution, illegal adoption and crime training, a Mail Today deep dive has revealed. The police say that organised gangs are behind these kidnappings.

This, despite efforts by the police through their various programmes like 'Operation Smile', 'Operation Milap' and 'Operation Muskaan' aimed at reuniting missing children with their families.

Last year, the Delhi Commission for Protection of Child Rights (DCPCR) identified 50 areas in the city from where cases of missing children are regularly reported. "Delhi has become a source and transit point for trafficking. This is the prime reason such high numbers of kids are going missing in the Capital," said Swati Maliwal, Chairperson of Delhi Commission for Women (DCW).

She blamed poor policing as one of the major factors behind these kidnappings in the city. "Delhi Police's investigating officers don't care for missing reports. They lose crucial hours when a fruitful investigation can be done, allowing kidnappers to get an easy escape and relocate kids," she said, quoting a recent case of Nihal Vihar where a seven-year-old girl was kidnapped, gang-raped and dumped in open. The parents claimed that they had lodged a missing complaint but cops did not bother to search her.

SAVE THE GIRL CHILD

Out of 9,899 untraced teenagers since 2008, 70% are girls. "Teenage girls are in high demand in the prostitution racket. They are abducted, kept in hideouts, starved for days and then trained in the flesh trade. They are also sent and sold outside Delhi and abroad as well," said Rishi Kant, Co-founder of NGO Shakti Vahini.

A member of NGO Bachpan Bachao Andolan said that teenagers are also preferred as domestic helps labourers. Last year, Delhi Police along with the NGO raided some factories in Sultanpuri and rescued 39 children aged 10-14 years. A senior police official in the Crime Branch said: "Kidnapping of children below eight years of age is mainly done to sell them to people interested in adoption. Mostly, the adoption of boys is in demand. As a result, the rate of kidnapping of boys is always high."

Another investigating officer said that organised kidnapping rackets in the National Capital are targeting small children. "Hospitals, parks, stretches outside homes, railway stations and crowded markets are the most vulnerable spots from where kids are abducted. Most of the time, women kidnappers are used," said another Crime Branch officer.

(Some names have been changed to protect identity)

Interlandelijke adoptie - UNICEF

International adoption

Intercountry adoption is the cutting of legal family ties between a child and the biological parents, and the inclusion of the child in a new family, in another country. Because in some countries there is too little supervision and control of proper implementation of adoption (as described in the Hague Adoption Convention), many children are insufficiently protected against risks such as illegal adoption or child trafficking. In addition, there are often other family members who can take care of the child, or there are other local childcare options. In other words; In many cases, international adoption is not in the best interests of the child.

What does UNICEF think?

Every child has the right to grow up with his parents. If that is not possible and adoption is considered, the best interests of the child are paramount. UNICEF believes it is very important that the adoption procedures are in line with the Hague Adoption Convention. More needs to be invested in strengthening national youth protection systems, such as foster care, parenting support for parents, temporary residential care, and possibly national adoption. In many cases, the international adoption as it currently takes place is not in the best interests of the child.


What does UNICEF do?

If a child cannot grow up with its parents, UNICEF ensures that it is investigated whether childcare is possible in its own environment. Preferably with family, in their own community or in a local foster home. Only if that is not possible can international adoption be considered. The adoption process must be in line with the Hague Adoption Convention. UNICEF supports governments of different countries with the de-institutionalization process: children who grow up unnecessarily separated from their parents in children's homes are reunited with their families. In addition, UNICEF cooperates with Social Affairs ministries in the monitoring and accreditation of children's homes. In addition, UNICEF supports replacement care for children and we work with governments to improve adoption procedures.

Dutch:


Interlandelijke adoptie

Interlandelijke adoptie is het doorsnijden van de juridische familiebanden tussen een kind en de biologische ouders, en het opnemen van het kind in een nieuwe familie, in een ander land.

Omdat er in sommige landen te weinig toezicht en controle is op een goede uitvoering van adoptie (zoals beschreven in het Haags Adoptieverdrag), zijn veel kinderen onvoldoende beschermd tegen risico’s als illegale adoptie of kinderhandel.  

Daarnaast zijn er vaak andere familieleden die de zorg voor het kind op zich kunnen nemen, of zijn er andere lokale opvangmogelijkheden. Met andere woorden; interlandelijke adoptie is in veel gevallen niet in het belang van het kind.  

Wat vindt UNICEF?

Ieder kind heeft het recht om op te groeien bij zijn ouders. Als dat niet kan en adoptie wordt overwogen, staat het belang van het kind voorop. UNICEF vindt het van groot belang dat de adoptieprocedures in lijn zijn met het Haags Adoptieverdrag. Er moet meer worden geïnvesteerd in het versterken van nationale jeugdbeschermingssystemen, zoals pleegzorg, opvoedingsondersteuning voor ouders, tijdelijke residentiële zorg, en eventueel nationale adoptie. De interlandelijke adoptie zoals die nu plaatsvindt, is in veel gevallen niet in het belang van het kind. 


Wat doet UNICEF?

Kan een kind niet bij zijn ouders opgroeien, dan zorgt UNICEF ervoor dat wordt onderzocht of er opvang in de eigen omgeving mogelijk is. Het liefst bij familie, in de eigen gemeenschap of in een lokaal pleeggezin. Pas als dat niet kan, mag interlandelijke adoptie worden overwogen. Het adoptieproces moet in lijn zijn met het Haags Adoptieverdrag.  

UNICEF ondersteunt regeringen van verschillende landen met het de-institutionaliseringsproces: kinderen die onnodig gescheiden van hun ouders opgroeien in kindertehuizen, worden herenigd met hun familie.?Daarnaast werkt UNICEF samen met ministeries van Sociale Zaken bij de monitoring en accreditatie van kindertehuizen. Bovendien ondersteunt UNICEF vervangende zorg voor kinderen en werken wij samen met overheden om adoptieprocedures te verbeteren. 

Wie zijn wij l Kinderrechten

Who are we

The Children's Rights Collective was established in 1995 and consists of 5 children's rights organizations. These are Defense for Children, the National Youth Council, Children's stamps, UNICEF Netherlands, and Save the Children and Terre des Hommes. Together we have the mission to ensure that the rights of children in the Netherlands are guaranteed. These children's rights are laid down in the UN Children's Rights Convention. We want children's rights to be guaranteed in government policy, in legislation, in the practice of organizations and everyone who deals with children. Are the rights of children violated in the Netherlands? Then we see it as our task to stand up for these children and their rights! The Children's Rights Collective provides information about children's rights. To ensure that children get what they are entitled to, everyone in the Netherlands, young and old, needs to know what exactly children's rights mean. We also advise the government on how children's rights can be guaranteed in the Netherlands and where improvements are still needed. The Dutch government writes a report to the United Nations Children's Rights Committee once every five years on the state of children's rights in the Netherlands. In addition to this government report, we send a report to the Children's Rights Committee in Geneva on behalf of the children's rights organizations. In it we give our our vision on the state of affairs regarding children's rights in the Netherlands. The Netherlands Youth Institute is connected to the Children's Rights Collective as an independent advisor. Below is an explanation of the members of the Children's Rights Collective:


Defense for Children

Defense for Children is an international organization that defends children's rights. It promotes children's rights in the Netherlands and abroad on the basis of the UN Children's Rights Convention. Defense for Children is convinced that children's rights can only really be strengthened if children's rights are laid down in legislation and regulations. And if there is continuous monitoring of compliance. Defense for Children therefore keeps a close eye on this. She also uses court judgments about the Children's Rights Convention and other treaties that have a link with children's rights.


Children's Stamps Foundation Netherlands

Children's stamps believes in the strength of each child. We want children to have the chance to get the best and the best out of themselves. Regardless of the situation, place or circumstances in which they grow up. With our support they get that chance. We work on three themes in the Netherlands and abroad: Education, Foster Care and Trauma Processing. Thanks to the Kinderpostzegelactie we can help children. The Kinderpostzegelactie is unique in the world. Through the campaign, Dutch school children learn to have something for children who are less fortunate. Our motto is: for children, by children.


NJR

NJR is the youth network of the Netherlands. We stand for a world in which young people get the best out of themselves and thereby have a positive influence on their environment. That is why we connect young people with themselves, with each other and with those who shape the world.


Save the Children

Save the Children monitors the rights of the child. And we take action if these rights are violated. Together with our partners and donors, we ensure that every child has a fair chance to become who they are. Good health, the opportunity to learn and a protected environment are basic conditions for this. In times of need we are the first to arrive and we are the last to leave. No mountain is too high for us here: we also stand up for the most difficult children to reach. Our solutions stem from the harsh reality of children. And from the experience that we have built up in our almost 100 years of existence.

UNICEF the Netherlands

Adoptie Standpunten SGP

It is most beautiful when children grow up with their own parents. That is natural and it is familiar. However, there are cases where, unfortunately, this is no longer possible. A suitable alternative must then be sought. Sometimes that is close by, with family or other acquaintances. But often you have to look for a solution further away. Foster care or adoption is a solution for these children. Care in a foster family is preferable to a stay in an institution. That is because of the added value of the stability and privacy of a family. That is why the availability of sufficient foster parents and adoptive parents is of great importance. Such parents deserve full support from the government.


Adoption is a lengthy process. The time limits and the procedures that apply must - wherever possible - be shortened and simplified.    

The costs of adoption must also be reduced.    Justice must take active action against abuses such as child trafficking and illegal adoption.    

The possibility for same-sex couples to adopt children should be deleted.    

With a decreasing number of adopted children from abroad, it is advisable to call for more attention to forms of long-term foster care.

There must be good provisions for foster parents, including a sufficient foster parent allowance and generous leave arrangements. For example, the foster child may not be duped by the costs of student transportation. When recruiting and selecting foster parents, foster parents may not be excluded on the grounds of religion or belief.    

In the event of an unwanted pregnancy, it is important to pay attention to the possibilities of adoption and foster care. All women must receive information about alternatives to abortion tailored to their emergency situation.

Dutch:


Het is het allermooist als kinderen bij hun eigen ouders opgroeien. Dat is natuurlijk en het is vertrouwd. Er zijn echter gevallen waarin dat helaas niet (meer) mogelijk is. Er moet dan gezocht worden naar een passend alternatief. Soms kan dat dichtbij, bij familie of andere bekenden. Maar vaak moet er op zoek worden gegaan naar een oplossing verder weg. Pleegzorg of adoptie is voor deze kinderen een uitkomst.

Opvang in een pleeggezin verdient trouwens de voorkeur boven verblijf in een instelling. Dat zit ‘m in de meerwaarde van de stabiliteit en beslotenheid van een gezin. Daarom is de beschikbaarheid van voldoende pleegouders en adoptieouders van groot belang. Zulke ouders verdienen voluit de steun van de overheid.

  • Adoptie is een langdurig proces. De termijnen en de procedures die gelden dienen -waar mogelijk- verkort en vereenvoudigd te worden.
  • Ook de kosten van adoptie moeten verlaagd worden.
  • Justitie dient actief op te treden tegen misstanden als kinderhandel en illegale adoptie.
  • De mogelijkheid voor paren van hetzelfde geslacht om kinderen te adopteren, moet worden geschrapt. 
  • Bij een afnemend aantal adoptiekinderen uit het buitenland verdient het aanbeveling om meer aandacht te vragen voor vormen van langdurige pleegzorg. Er dienen goede voorzieningen voor pleegouders te zijn, waaronder een toereikende pleegoudervergoeding en royale verlofregelingen. Het pleegkind mag bijvoorbeeld niet gedupeerd worden door gesteggel over de kosten van leerlingenvervoer. Bij werving en selectie van pleegouders mogen pleegouders niet op grond van godsdienst of levensovertuiging worden uitgesloten. 
  • Bij ongewenste zwangerschap is het belangrijk dat er aandacht wordt gegeven aan de mogelijkheden van adoptie en pleegzorg. Alle vrouwen moeten informatie krijgen over speciaal op hun noodsituatie afgestemde alternatieven voor abortus.

LAAT KINDEREN ZOVEEL MOGELIJK IN OORSPRONKELIJKE OMGEVING OPGROEIEN

LET CHILDREN GROW UP IN ORIGINAL ENVIRONMENT


Many adoptive parents devote themselves heart and soul to their children. Nevertheless, the interests of the child must be paramount and the starting point must be that children can grow up as much as possible in their original environment and every effort must be made to prevent adoption from turning into child trafficking. Adoption from abroad is also a vulnerable process, where a lot can go wrong. Therefore, adopting children from abroad must be handled with care and with extreme care. The government carefully checks whether there is no question of child abduction, child trafficking or corruption. The retention period for adoption files must be considerably extended.

Dutch:


LAAT KINDEREN ZOVEEL MOGELIJK IN OORSPRONKELIJKE OMGEVING OPGROEIEN

Veel adoptieouders zetten zich met hart en ziel in voor hun kinderen. Niettemin moet het belang van het kind voorop staan en het uitgangspunt zijn dat kinderen zoveel mogelijk in hun oorspronkelijke omgeving op kunnen groeien en moet er alles aan gedaan worden om te voorkomen dat adoptie tot kinderhandel verwordt. Adoptie uit het buitenland is bovendien een kwetsbaar proces, waarbij veel mis kan gaan. Daarom moet er terughoudend en uiterst zorgvuldig worden omgegaan met adoptie van kinderen uit het buitenland. De overheid controleert nauwgezet of er geen sprake is van kinderontvoering, kinderhandel of corruptie. De bewaartermijn van adoptiedossiers moet fors worden verlengd.

Verslag bijeenkomst Wereldkinderen..

Report meeting World Children ..

This summer I was approached by a Master's student in Educational Sciences at Leiden University. In collaboration with, among others. The Wereldkinderen Foundation hoped to learn more about international adoption in the Netherlands. Her goal was, as a neutral third party, to gather information about the context of intercountry adoption in Bangladesh in the 70s and 80s. This student wanted to try to collect a wide range of opinions and stories from different sources. She came to me through my blogs that I wrote about Bangladesh and adoption. She said that she had read my blogs with pleasure. She wanted to hear my story and ask me some questions and if she could use some information from me. Upon hearing that she did this in collaboration with Wereldkinderen, I became a bit skeptical. Wereldkinderen was not so loved by many adopted people and I also had my thing with Wereldkinderen. She asked if I knew more people who wanted to participate in this. I'd look for her. But not everyone was eager to lend his / her cooperation. She was sorry, but after I explained why, she understood. The invitation to a meeting follows. I didn't know they gave them a meeting for this either. Wereldkinderen wanted to invite all adopted people from Bangladesh to present their findings they have made in recent months to us. What findings? And what do they have for something new that we don't know yet? I would go. I later doubted, also because world children were vague about this gathering. And it wasn't next door. After I had spoken to the student last Monday, I decided to go to the meeting on Wednesday 27 November. With the knowledge that there will be nothing new. But yes, the miracles are not over yet! After a journey of 2.5 hours I arrive at Wereldkinderen in The Hague. I thought I would see black from the bengal who had all come to this meeting. But unfortunately, I only saw 7 brown heads, while we are really with 500 .. the turnout was therefore very thin. The opening.. The director of Wereldkinderen, who was also new there, opened the meeting. Was he a director? I wondered. I didn't really see anyone standing there radiating authority, standing firmly in his shoes and knowing what he was talking about. No, none of this! I found him nervous and confused.

The first speech was made by the master student. From the week when I had her on the phone, she told me she was quite upset, mainly because there was so much negative about this meeting. But she did well. What I found unfortunate was that she summarized the information she got from my blogs in one go. On the contrary, she could have made a story out of it and elaborated on it. In her story, I also missed examples of the misunderstandings that existed during the adoptions. Or sharing the experiences of adopted people. I also indicated this to her. They could not obtain information from former Wereldkinderen employees, unfortunately they are no longer there. From a few people, such as Dr. Preger, a doctor who worked in Bangladesh, could also have approached them and obtained interesting information. By the name Dr. They all looked a little sheepishly at Preger. A missed opportunity for World Children. Mr Manzur was blamed for everything and what is the share of World Children? They still act as if they know nothing. DNA database .. An adopted from India, who works at Fiom, told about her own adoption, the search and DNA database. How or what you can do, where you need to be, etc. I found it boring and long-winded. Also because we have been working on this for so long. This entire meeting was one big child's play. Wereldkinderen could have done much more than what they have done so far. Tips for the next meeting .. first check everything out, get the most out of it. Make an inventory of the needs of the adopted and respond to this again. Several adopted people interview, tell their story, try to reach more people, etc ... so enough learning points for Wereldkinderen. Adoption remains a sensitive topic with many adopted people and everyone experiences it differently and everyone deals with it in his / her own way. There is a lot of anger and frustration at various authorities .. Because do you know what adopters would really want? The magic word: RECOGNITION! That World Children take on their responsibilities and can admit that they made mistakes at the time. Then maybe there is a possibility for a cooperation between World Children and the adopted ones ..

Dutch:

Verslag bijeenkomst Wereldkinderen..

Couple use Twitter to rescue newborn girl abandoned on Indian garbage dump

(CNN)Vinod Kapri, an Indian filmmaker based in New Delhi, checks Twitter first thing every morning -- like virtually every journalist on the planet.

On Friday, something amid the relentless stream of content caught his attention: a graphic video of a newborn baby, who was left abandoned on a garbage dump, naked and wailing.
Almost moved to tears, Kapri showed the video to his wife Sakshi Joshi, who is also a journalist. "We were very upset," Kapri told CNN. "I couldn't watch the whole video -- I could hear her crying and that was enough," Joshi said.

Both immediately knew what to do. "Our conversation suddenly shifted to: 'We should adopt her," Joshi added.
So Joshi tweeted a request to her followers to send over any information they could find about the baby, saying she and Kapri wanted to adopt her if they could locate her.
"We had no idea of the location of the video or its authenticity," Kapri said. "We see many fake videos of babies on social media."
In a couple of hours, Joshi's tweet -- and her husband's following post in English -- went viral, with hundreds of netizens searching for clues that could allow the couple to locate the girl.
"Everybody on Twitter was keen to find the girl," Joshi said. "Twitter had the biggest role in the whole story."
"Everybody has (their) own ideology and opinions, but this was beyond ideology. It shows that humanity still exists, calling to everyone in this world," she added.
Thanks also to their journalistic sources, the couple started to get some leads that the girl was found in Rajasthan.

So Kapri asked one of his former colleagues and friend, Rahul Choudhry, to go and find her "on a personal level."
Choudhry found out the baby girl had been admitted in a serious condition to the Jawaharlal Nehru Government Hospital in the city of Nagaur. He visited the facility and sent a video of her to Kapri, who immediately tweeted it to his followers.
"Then we had a long chat with the doctor and we told him we had the intention of adopting the baby. Even though we're not legal parents, we already felt emotionally connected," Kapri said.

The doctor told him that the baby was doing well and that only her weight, 1.6 kg (3.5 pounds), was cause for concern. But he invited Kapri and Joshi to come to Rahjahstan to see the baby.
So on Saturday, the couple drove 500 kilometers (311 miles) to Nagaur.

In the meantime, they asked their Twitter followers about the adoption process.
"We never had any intention of adopting a baby. I'm already 46," Kapri said. "We had no idea about the process. We started researching and we found out that adoption is quite tedious and long in India."
"We are both going to do our medical checkups, the application will take 2-3 more days," he added.
Once they got to the hospital, words failed them.
"I can't express my feelings ... what me and my wife felt was just beyond words, I completely lost my words. Inexplicable," he said.
And on Father's Day, Joshi tweeted a picture of the three of them together, saying: "The whole Kapri family is dying to have her in the family."

As a temporary name, Joshi and Kapri decided to call her "Pihu," which was suggested by some Twitter users.
"It's the name of a bird and a film I directed. The main character has a 2-year-old," Kapri said.
CNN has reached out to the hospital for comment.

DRAMA MICU?EISORINA,feti?a de numai8 ani,luat? dela familia care...

DRAMA MICUZEISORINA, the little girl of only 8, taken by the family who she grew her date for adoption in the US, she took the street over 300 people! State authorities, IMPOSSIBLE!

More than 300 people protested in Baia de Aram on Sunday, empathizing with the Sarmatian family, who was left without one of the girls he had taken from the orphanage and raised them, and now the authorities they gave it to adoption for a couple in America. If, initially, the Mehedinti Court refused to accept the adoption, the court's argument being in the meaning of the little Sorina to remain with the family that grew up, the judges at the Court of Appeal

Craiova have finally determined that the 8-year-old girl is taken from this family and left in the USA. The S?r?mat village, which had priority in adopting the baby, according to Romanian law, accuses officials of the General Directorate for Social Assistance and Child Protection (DGASPC) Mehedinti committed a series of forgery in the documents filed in the court file.

The wives Mariana and Vasile ?r?m?t wanted to take a little girl in the placement, but they returned home with two little girls. Andreea had at that time nine months, and only she wanted to take her wives, except that her neck Sorina, a girl of only one year and two months, was hanging on the woman and she did not let go. Since then, the ones two grew up together in the house of the Sheremat family in the Negoie?ti village, near Baia de Aram?, as two

sisters. They share the same room, they are dressed the same way, they go to school together, they are practically and Mariana and Vasile call them "mommy" and "daddy". It must be said that the Sarmatits have two children, theirs, who are now married to their homes. Andreea adopted it after some time, but Sorina did not she met the conditions of adoption, because she was interested in her an aunt from time to time, but husbands

Tweet from CEO CARA (@CEO_CARA)

CEO CARA (@CEO_CARA) tweeted at 2:09 am on Sun, Jun 16, 2019:

https://t.co/sX5pP3uXTR

That's a false story. The child has been registered on CARINGS and it will be rehablitated through adoption by #CARA as per the legal process. The child has been named Ganga and will be placed in the State Government's Adoption Agency.

(https://twitter.com/CEO_CARA/status/1139995866666659840?s=03)

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