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Bihar Shelter Home Rape: SC Grants CBI 3 Months To Complete Investigation

The Supreme Court has granted a further period of three months to the CBI to complete its investigation in Muzaffarpur shelter home rape case. The vacation bench of Justice Indu Malhotra and Justice MR Shah took note of interim status report filed by the CBI in this case. The bench also directed the investigating agency to conduct investigation on following aspects of the case (i) the offences alleged under Section 377 IPC. Also Read - Genuineness Of Will Can't Be Doubted Merely Because It Was Executed In Favour Of Neighbour: SC [Read Order] (ii) the offences under the IT Act regarding video recording of the sexual exploitation of the inmates of the shelter homes, (iii) the other persons, including the outsiders and officers who were involved and facilitated in the sexual abuse of the inmates who were being abused under intoxication of drugs; and (iv) the illegal trafficking of the girls by this Institute. Also Read - Case Of Death By Single Blow On Vital Part Of Body May Fall Under Section 302 IPC (Murder), Reiterates SC [Read Judgment] CBI has also been directed to submit the final report within a period of three months. In November, last year, the Supreme Court had transferred to the CBI the investigation into the allegations of sexual abuse of the residents of 16 children's homes in the state.

Bihar Shelter Home Rape: SC Grants CBI 3 Months To Complete Investigation

The Supreme Court has granted a further period of three months to the CBI to complete its investigation in Muzaffarpur shelter home rape case.

The vacation bench of Justice Indu Malhotra and Justice MR Shah took note of interim status report filed by the CBI in this case.

The bench also directed the investigating agency to conduct investigation on following aspects of the case

(i) the offences alleged under Section 377 IPC.

(ii) the offences under the IT Act regarding video recording of the sexual exploitation of the inmates of the shelter homes,

Adoption is the best way to ensure family for every child; State level training programme on Adoption Regulations, 2017

Bhubaneswar: Adoption is the best to ensure family for every child. It has been unanimously agreed by the speakers at the state level training programme on Adoption Regulations, 2017. The State Level Training Programme on Adoption Regulations, 2017 has been organised by State Adoption Resource Agency and Odisha State Child Protection Society, Department of Women & Child Development and Mission Shakti. This programme was sponsored by Central Adoption Resource Authority, Ministry of Women & Child Development, Govt. of India, New Delhi, in the Kalinga Conference Hall of Panthanivas, Lewis Road, Bhubaneswar, today i.e. on 4th June’2019.

The objective of the Training Programme is to familiarise the Adoption Regulations, 2017 and child adoption web portal “Child Adoption Resource Information and Guidance System” (CARINGS). Chairperson of Child Welfare Committees, District Child Protection Officer, Manager of Specialised Adoption Agency from 30 districts were present in the programme. Representatives from UNICEF, Medical Association, Paediatric Association and Gynaecology Association also participated in the programme. The inaugural session was graced by Smt. Sandhyabati Pradhan, Chairperson, OSCPCR, Sri Reghu G, IAS, Director, ICDS & Social Welfare cum Director, OSCPS and Ms. Quamar Sultana Begum, Member Secretary, Odisha State Council for Child Welfare.

Smt. Rega Geetarani Pattanik welcomed the dignitaries, resource persons and the participants to the training programme. In her welcome address she emphasised on effective implementation of adoption programme, monitoring, legal provisions and post adoption follow up of

E-Mail Exchange FOI Request 18/19-102 [SEC=OFFICIAL]

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Subject: FOI Request 18/19-102 [SEC=OFFICIAL]

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This doctor quit her job and changed countries to care for her ‘daughters’

KOLKATA: Dr Michelle Harrison had everything a career-woman can boast of. A gynaecologist-cum- psychiatrist, she was the

worldwide executive director of Johnson & Johnson Institute for Children and taught at leading universities like Harvard, Rutgers and the University of Pittsburgh. She even successfully battled cancer. But then she quit everything, sold her home in New Jersey and came to Kolkata to be a mother to differently-abled abandoned children. It began with the adoption of her second child, Cecilia Devyani Harrison, in 1984. In 2000, she decided to bring Cecilia to Kolkata. “I wanted to unite her with her biological parents,” said Harrison, who speaks broken Bengali.

In 2001, they went to International Mission of Hope (IMH), the organization from where Cecilia was adopted. At IMH, a mashi surfaced. “We were told she was Cecilia’s biological mother. They even produced a twin sister, a biological father and a grandmother who were pining for her,” she recalled. Since most adopted children have a desire to know their roots, there was no reason not to accept what we were told. It was only after Cecilia overheard something that she felt “didn’t make sense” that Harrison started suspecting something was amiss. She decided to go for a DNA test and discovered Cecilia’s DNA matched none of them.

Moreover, Harrison found that differently-abled kids in several such homes were kept tied to their beds. Her tryst with deceit, falsehood and the appalling state of these children helped make her mind up to do something about them. Immediately after her successful battle against cancer, she sold her New Jersey home and came to Kolkata to build Shishur Sevay, a shelter-cum-facilitating centre in New Alipore’s Sahapur for girls with disability of varying degrees, including microcephaly, autism and cerebral palsy. In 2013, Harrison set up a learning centre called Ichhe Dana on the top floor of Shishur Sevay, where the girls attend classes every day. Three of them will be appearing for the National Institute for Open Schooling examination next year. Harrison also introduced the Sweden-made Tobii Eye Tracker, which allows communication via eye movements. For the first time in India, girls with disabilities could communicate their thoughts and needs using their eyes on a screen. The system is used both in class and for informal communication and is often set up by the older girls to speak with their sisters.

In the course of running Shishur Sevay, Harrison has even tackled extortion calls and veiled threats by realtors. She now spends sleepless nights worrying about the safety of her children. With her resources depleting fast, she is also worrying about funding the needs of her children after her death. Harrison’s daughters — Heather Volik, a lawyer, and Cecilia, a drummer — have set up an organization called Friends of Shishur Sevay in the US to raise funds for their mother’s home. “My daughters are my pillars of strength. Both keep coming to visit me once in a while,” Harrison added.

Tragische verhalen: veel misstanden rond adoptie in Haïti

Tragic stories: many abuses concerning adoption in Haïti

They are heartbreaking stories: parents in Haiti who, under false pretenses, temporarily surrendered their child to the nuns but never saw them again.

They had no idea that their child would be given up for adoption and disappeared abroad. Nieuwsuur made a report.

No real orphans in the orphanages

There has been much wrong with the adoption industry in the poorest country in the western hemisphere, as it has been shown for some time. Birth certificates are often forged and in the 750 orphanages about 80 percent of the children are not orphans at all. Money is the reason for the enormous amount of orphanages. Annually, about one hundred million dollars go to these orphanages. Big business so.

Sushmita Sen reveals how daughter Renee reacted when she learnt she was adopted

Sushmita Sen opened up about how daughters Renee and Alisah reacted, when she told them that they were adopted.

Sushmita Sen is a beacon of inspiration to her fans, as she is a single mother to two girls, Renee and Alisah. She adopted Renee in 2000, and then Alisah in 2010.

Speaking about how she broke the news of adoption to them, Sushmita said that she explained it through a game. "We played opposites, tall short, and all that. I then said adopted and biological. So Renee said 'I'm adopted?' I said yes, biological is boring. You are special, you're born from the heart. And then she would tell everyone else, 'You're biological? You're boring'. I'm so glad that it worked both times like magic," she said.

Sushmita also revealed that she wanted the girls to find out about their real parents once they turn 18. So when Renee was 16, she explained to her that she could go to court and look at the names of her biological names in an envelope.

"I told her that I don't know if they have names of biological parents in there, but that information is rightfully hers. I didn't want to give her the wrong information and break her heart. She asked me, 'Why do you want me to go and find out?' I said, 'I'm not saying go find out, I'm saying you have a right to know. She gave it a moment's pause and said, 'No, I don't want to find out.'"

Sushmita dotes on her daughters and her Instagram posts are proof of this. The girls have accepted Sushmita's boyfriend Rohman Shawl as part of the family. They're usually seen on family getaways and dinner dates.

On the work front, Sushmita confirmed at an event in 2018 that she has been reading scripts for a while now, and feels ready to sign a film. "I have been looking at scripts again for the past one and a half year. I think I am ready to commit six months of my life to a film. But, just because I am ready, doesn't mean the perfect script is ready for me," she said.

Hechtingsproblematiek in pleegzorg- en adoptiesituaties extra ingewikkeld

Attachment problems in foster care and adoption situations are extra complicated

A secure attachment is of great importance for every child. The attachment of foster and adopted children is under pressure for various 
reasons. Adoption expert Dr. Anneke Vinke provides a contribution on this theme at the annual congress on attachment problems.
In anticipation of this, Blik op Hulp interviewed her.
Attachment and trust Relatively many foster and adopted children experience difficulties in attachment.
Vinke explains why that is: “A newborn child gets to know the world through his or her parents.
The parents respond to signals from the child and help the child to regulate himself and give meaning to the world.
A child learns to trust in this reciprocal process of getting used to and bonding to each other. Confidence that someone comes when it
cries because there is hunger, because there is a full diaper, because there is abdominal pain or because it just feels bad for a while.
Also trust that the parent who comes is entirely for the child, can comfort the child and help to calm down. The parent tells in words
what is going on and why it didn't feel right. The child learns to deal with both the emotional inner world and the physical outer world
through the relationship with the parents. The first experiences of availability, care and attention are essential. The child receives
the message that it is welcome in this world, that it can be there and find its own place. That there are people who love the baby and
will always be there in times of stress and tension ”.
Adoption and foster care  But what if that is not the case? What if parents can't do this? “Parents cannot be emotionally or physically ready for the child for a 
variety of reasons, for example if someone has become unwantedly pregnant. Or if you are raped and this child does not want. If it is
dangerous to have a child because, for example, you are not married or because you are fleeing or pregnant with someone other than your
husband. If you are sick or addicted as a mother. If you are stuck in detention or live on the street or if you live in a war zone.
Many situations are conceivable where it is difficult to attach to your child during pregnancy. Then you may not be able to concern
yourself with your child because you are not yet able to properly arrange your own life. In such situations, a child may be given up
immediately after birth. In countries far away or - but that rarely happens - in the Netherlands. If a child does not have a family,
the agreement is that a family will be sought. Then a search begins that often involves transfers and temporary care.
Every time a new upbringing and attachment relationship is entered into and that is difficult. Certainly until a long-term place has
been found, a child can become very confused by this. There is no continuity, no predictability and that makes the world unsafe ”.

Complicated Relocations and accompanying broken attachment relationships make adoption and foster care complicated. After all,
new experiences build on old ones and if the first experiences in life are not positive, it is difficult to build on that. Vinke:
“Compare it with a tower: if the foundation is not there or is not complete, the chance that you can build it very high is low.
Children who have not been told from the first day, or even better from the moment of conception, that there is someone unconditional
for them, who find them the most beautiful, sweetest, best baby ever, find it difficult to find a safe place in the world place to
experience. It becomes difficult if you were born after a stressful pregnancy in which a mother did not feel safe. Often you also see that
a mother had her own problems, life itself was difficult to cope with, or that there are too many difficult things on the path of parents
so that they cannot be unconditional for a child.

Multiple educators  attachment problems adoption anneke vinke Almost all adopted children in the Netherlands were born abroad. They have lived for a long or 
shorter time either in a foster home or in a home. This means that they have had several educators. "Research shows that the more
educators, the more difficult to develop a secure model of attachment," says Vinke. “That makes sense, because every educator does
it a little differently and as a small child you get confused easily. What you learn from that, very early, is to survive.
You survive by choosing your own path and doing it yourself, while the intention is that as a child you learn to trust adults
and get to know yourself through them. Many adopted children and foster children like to keep control, we often see self-determining
behavior ”. Check When asked about the areas of life in which attachment manifests itself as a problem, Vinke prefers to turn the question around:
“In which area do you see no problems? The reason for contacting care providers is often behavioral problems, anger or anxiety complaints
or problems at school. But if a child is adopted or grows up as a foster child, you should also always check the attachment development.
Often that is under the problems that we see. Attachment is not immediately visible, but attachment problems are often among those for
which help is sought. There is often a strong desire for control: wanting to do it yourself. That makes it difficult to perform tasks,
assignments at home and at school because then someone else decides what you "have to do". Conflicts arise at home, at school, with friends. "
Incentives  Attachment problems are often mistaken for something else. Vinke: “There is often hyperalert behavior: you cannot miss anything. 
The world is not safe so you must always be on your guard. Something can happen just like that. Selecting information and incentives is
complicated: it happens that children are busy with everything at the same time. They therefore have a short concentration curve and are
easily distracted. These children often get the ADHD label attached while there is an underlying attachment problem. It may also be that
a child is very withdrawn, seems to move into its own world and makes less good contact. Such behavior resembles autism but is not really
"real" autism. Researchers then speak of "quasi autism."

Socially emotional However, the impact of attachment problems on foster and adopted children is not limited to the way they handle incentives.
"If there are many nasty, traumatic memories, they can come back in dreams but also in daytime images," Vinke continues.
“There are often problems at school: both with learning and social. If your mind is full of memories and you have to do your best
all day to stay in control, it is not always possible to learn new things. Social functioning is often difficult because control
can also play a role there. Children can be bullied with their skin color or appearance. That is complicated. Sometimes you see
separation anxiety, which can manifest itself in claiming behavior towards other children or towards parents. Sleep problems are
also often seen. Just like eating problems, stealing and walking away. With older children we also often see substance use, game
addiction and I can go on and on. In addition, identity questions are also common. Children ask themselves questions such as "who am I?"
And "To whom do I belong?" But questions about culture, ethnicity and country of origin are also common.

NAS: Verklaring na uitzending 2 juni jl. (Nieuwsuur)

Verklaring na uitzending 2 juni jl.

Maandag 3 juni 2019

Verklaring van de NAS n.a.v. een Nieuwsuur uitzending van 2 juni 2019

De NAS heeft kennisgenomen van de Nieuwsuur uitzending van zondag 2 juni jl. Vanuit de NAS herkennen wij niet de suggestie dat er sprake zou zijn van misstanden bij huidige adopties uit Haïti.

De NAS is vergunninghouder in interlandelijke adoptie sinds december 2002. Over adopties uit Haïti in de jaren ‘80 of ‘90 kan de NAS geen uitspraken doen. Vanaf 2005 bemiddelt de NAS in adopties uit Haïti in goede afstemming met de Haïtiaanse en Nederlandse autoriteiten.