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Compulsory adoptions save municipalities millions - DF is now asking questions to the minister

Doubts have been raised as to whether the economy plays a role when municipalities choose to forcibly adopt children.

Lolland Municipality is responsible for more than half of the forced adoptions that the municipalities have sent to the National Board of Appeal at national level.

This year, the municipality has nominated seven children between zero and seven years for forced adoption, while at national level there are 13 settings.

Five forcibly adopted children can save the municipality four million kroner in 2022, shows a savings catalog from this summer, which DR Zealand has been given access to. The municipality saves the cost of a placement or institution.

This now causes the Danish People's Party's Karin Nødgaard, who is deputy chair of the Folketing's social, interior and children's committee, to ask a number of questions to Minister of Social Affairs Mai Mercado (K). It writes DR News.

Assam-born Belgium woman searches for her biological mother online

GUWAHATI: A woman, Rajini who was born in Assam but now lives in Belgium is searching for her biological mother.

In a video posted on YouTube, she narrates her story and is being shared on many social media applications.

She wrote on a Facebook page that she was born in Tezpur, Assam, on the 24th of February, 1983. Four days later, someone bought her to the orphanage, Missionaries of Charity in Tezpur also known as the Orphanage of Mother Theresa. She lived there for a year and then was moved to Kolkata’s Shishu Bhavan orphanage. At the age of 2, she was adopted and now has lived in Belgium for 33 years.

She said that she is not sure if her mother gave her up or if her mother even knows that Rajini is alive. She said she does not even know the truth and that for her entire life, she thought she was an orphan. Even her adoptive parents thought that she was an orphan as no information was available about Rajini’s biological family.

She said that for the past two years, she has been writing to the orphanage and the adoption agency and recently, she got some positive news. Listed below is the information shared by her:

Kyrgyzstan Notice: Suspension of All Adoption Service Providers

Travel.State.GovU.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE — BUREAU OF CONSULAR AFFAIRS

Travel.State.Gov > Intercountry Adoption News and Notices > Kyrgyzstan Notice: Suspension of All Adoption Service Providers

Kyrgyzstan Notice: Suspension of All Adoption Service Providers

Last Updated: December 21, 2018

The Kyrgyz government notified the U.S. Department of State that it has suspended the accreditation of all foreign Adoption Service Providers (ASPs) operating in the country. Although the Kyrgyz Ministry of Labor and Social Development’s (MLSD) notice (see below) only cited a failure to submit post-adoption reports as the reason for the suspension and indicated that the suspension would be for 30 days, the Kyrgyz government has indicated to the Department that it has additional concerns and that the suspension could be longer, as explained below.

Abbotsford couple ‘heartbroken’ as African adoption stalls once again

WATCH: Another delay for Abbotsford couple adopting son from Ghana

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There has been another setback for an Abbotsford couple trying to bring their adopted son to Canada from Ghana.

Kimberlee Moran and her husband Clark have been working to bring the boy to B.C. for more than three years — a process that has stalled in recent months.

On Friday, they got a letter from the Canadian government dashing their hopes once again.

Hilfsprojekte aus unserer Region: Wo der Spendenfranken gut aufgehoben ist

Aid projects from our region: where the donation franc is in good hands

It's cold and uncomfortable outside. René Hofmann stands in the door of his family home in Safenwil and asks for a warm living room. Here Marcel Hauser sits at the dining table and looks at photos from Ethiopia on the computer. The Zofinger recently made them on a trip with René Hofmann. Hauser's son Julien (13) was also there. "He wanted to see Ethiopia and learn how people live there," says Marcel Hauser. The independent organizational consultant was with René Hofmann for the first time in the world's most populous landlocked country five years ago. The two men know each other through the Safenwil Association Aid Project Ethiopia. "The Reformed Church Oftringen has been supporting these projects for several years," explains Marcel Hauser, who works as a social deacon on a part-time basis. The 59-year-old is impressed by the wide-ranging commitment and direct help: "We live here like in the land of milk and honey, while the majority of people in Ethiopia have nothing." Hauser tells of the trip and the capital Addis Ababa.

In the shadow of luxurious hotels and shiny high-rise buildings, thousands live in the slums on the brink of existence. One-room corrugated iron huts often serve as homes for entire families. Not even that had a widowed mother, who lived with her four daughters on the street makeshift under a small tarp. Unprotected from violence and against cold nights and rain. "She was so friendly, calm and never asked for help," recalls Hauser and continues: "Thanks to René Hofmann and the association, the family now lives safely in a modest apartment." Like this family, many people in Ethiopia lack adequate access to drinking water and there is no sanitation or sanitation. Most are also excluded from state health care.

Helping people help themselves

The aim of the Safenwil association is to help people to help themselves. Since 2006, the focus has been on the construction of toilet facilities that improve the hygienic conditions of hundreds of people. The construction of wells and wells also guarantees hundreds of people access to clean water and helps reduce child mortality.

Aussies scammed by fake orphans scandal

Aussies scammed by fake orphans scandal

Aussies have revealed their “shock and sadness” after handing $480,000 to a charity that’s now been exposed as a shocking scam.

Gary Nunn

news.com.auDECEMBER 17, 201811:01AM

Forty Australians have been duped into donating more than $480,000 to a charity scam that coerced children into a fake orphanage.

In Landmark Ruling, Singapore HC Allows Gay Couple To Legally Adopt Their Son

In a landmark judgement, Singapore High Court has ruled in favour of a gay man who sought to adopt his biological son, whom he fathered through a surrogate. This judgement overruled a 2017 order, which said that he could not legally adopt his son, as he was born via in-vitro fertilisation in the United States- a process not allowed in Singapore.

“We attribute significant weight to the concern not to violate the public policy against the formation of same-sex family units on account of its rational connection to the present dispute and the degree to which this policy would be violated should an adoption order be made,” Chief Justice Sundaresh Menon said, reported ABC News.

Eligible to be Singapore’s citizen

Same-sex marriages are not recognised in Singapore and gay sex is illegal. The child was considered illegitimate in the eyes of law as the biological mother and father were not married. This judgement, not only gives legal parental rights to the couple but also make the child eligible for Singapore’s citizenship.

The mother of the four-year-old waived all parental rights during surrogacy. The egg donor was never identified. The 46-year-old man, who has been with his partner for the last 13 years, will now have legal rights over the child.