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UN resolution will focus on children without parental care

In a historic move, the UN General Assembly have selected ‘Children without parental care’ as the theme for the ‘Rights of the Child’ resolution for 2019. SOS Children’s Villages has applauded UN Member States for their decision – working in partnership with a coalition of 80 NGOs to express its support.

The children’s charity has offered to share it’s expertise and learnings, gained through 70 years protecting unsupported children worldwide, to support Member States’ efforts to ensure the rights of unsupported children are upheld and fulfilled.

SOS Children’s Villages works to encourage international awareness and commitment to the rights of children without parental care worldwide. They aim to strengthen the laws protecting children, both now and in the future, thereby effecting a sustainable approach to the protection of children.

SOS Children’s Villages President Siddhartha Kaul said: “We are privileged to work with committed colleagues from across the child-rights community to bring global attention to the situation of children without parental care. As practitioners in over 130 countries we know that such focus is needed to enshrine the rights of children to quality care that meets their individual best interest.”

The announcement represents the first step towards the adoption of the resolution in the UN General Assembly in 2019. Once adopted, the non-binding resolution could become the most internationally recognised guidance for states and concerned stakeholders on protecting the rights of children without parental care or at risk of losing it.

Sweden: Responsible authority does not investigate the adoptions (Chile)

Hear Kristina Svartz, Director General of MFoF, explains why they do not investigate the adoptions. Photo: SVT

Responsible authority does not investigate the adoptions

published November 15, 2018

The Family Law and Parental Support Authority, MFoF, has decided not to open a regulatory case and investigate the adoption center's adoption of adoptions from Chile.

According to Director General Kristina Svartz, the explanation is that this task is not within the authority's mission.

Adoption without parental consent legalised in NSW

Critics say new laws affecting thousands of children in state’s foster care system will lead to another stolen generation

Lorena Allam

Fri 23 Nov 2018 02.27 GMT Last modified on Fri 23 Nov 2018 09.47 GMT

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Child Rights Awareness

Dr. Ruchi Thakur,

Dr. Vishal Sharma

Children are an important part of the human society. The children of today are the future of tomorrow; this argument presumes has special significance in India as children (0-14 years) comprise one third of the total population . India is home to the largest number of children in the world, significantly larger than the number in China. The country has 20 per cent of the 0- 4 years child population of the world.

According to Article 1 of UNCRC, every human being below the age of 18 years is considered a child. As per Educational Statistics (2001), the child population in India from 0 – 18 years is 442 million, which is 43.06% of the total population and they are to be allowed to enjoy their rights. It is estimated that about 40 per cent of children are in difficult circumstances or vulnerable which include children without family support, children forced into labour, abused/ trafficked children, children on the streets, children affected by substance abuse, by armed conflict/civil/unrest/natural calamity etc. survival, growth, development and protection of these very large numbers therefore need priority, focus and attention (Report of the working group on Child Rights, 2012-2017). In India, children’s vulnerabilities and exposure to violations of their rights remain spread and multiple in nature. The manifestations of these violations are various; malnutrition, inadequate health care, feticide, infanticide, school dropout, child marriage many other forms of violence and abuse. Child beggary, Child labour, Child trafficking, Child sexual/physical abuse etc are the heinous crimes committed against children reflecting in the intensity of Child Rights violation in the contemporary society. National Census (2011) reported that in India 47 out of every 1000 live births do not complete their first year of life, 10.12 million child labourers are aged between 5 to 14 years, out of the 400 million children, every second child is malnourished and over 81.5 lakh children don’t go to school.

Children’s rights were recognized after the Ist World war, with the adoption of the Declaration of Geneva, in 1924. The process of recognition of children’s rights continued thanks to the UN, with the adoption of the Declaration of Children’s Rights in 1959. The recognition of the child’s interest and his rights became real on 20 November 1989 with the adoption of the International Convention on the Rights of the Child. World leaders, in 1989 decided that children needed a special assembly just for them because people under 18 years old often need special care and protection that adults do not. The child rights came into existence in 1990 and further it was rectified in 1992. According to UNICEF, Convention on the Rights of the Child is the first legally binding international instrument to incorporate the full range of human rights-civil, cultural, economic, political and social rights. The Convention on the Rights of the Child, sets out these rights in 54 articles and two Optional Protocols. On 25 May 2000, two optional protocols were adopted i.e. the First optional protocol to the CRC on the involvement of children in military conflicts and the second optional protocol exclude the sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography. Both protocols have been ratified by above 150 states. In December 2011, third optional protocol relating to communication of complaints was adopted, on 28 February 2012, opened for signature and came into effect on 14 April 2014.

Premier agrees to look at inter-country adoption

(CNS): The premier has agreed to examine the possibility of asking the United Kingdom to extend the Hague Convention on the Protection of Children and Co-operation in Respect of Inter-country Adoption to enable Caymanian families to adopt children from overseas. Following the presentation of a private member’s motion brought by Chris Saunders, the opposition member for Bodden Town West, Alden McLaughlin said Saunders had done a good job persuading the government to look at the issue.

In his presentation Saunders said that he was aware of Caymanian families unable to have children who have sought to adopt from overseas because the pool for babies or very young children available for adoption locally is very small. But they are finding that in many cases, when they look further afield, they are prevented from adopting even when a suitable match is found because the countries of the children’s birth are signatures of the Hague convention and so cannot allow inter-country adoption with a non-member.

He asked government to see if the convention could be extended to Cayman to widen the pool for at least a few local families.

“All we are asking for is for the government to reach out to the UK to see if they can extend that convention and at least maybe two or three families can start a family of their own,” he told the Legislative Assembly, adding that it could expand the options for people who have had challenges starting a family.

The convention is designed to facilitate adoption of children around the world in the best interest of those children while protecting them from potential trafficking.

Ministry Says 539 Child Care Institutes Shut Down In India

Ministry Says 539 Child Care Institutes Shut Down In India

Reports of alleged rape of girl inmates at two shelter homes emerged recently. (File)

NEW DELHI: The government has so far shut down 539 child care institutes (CCIs) across the country since August when shelter home rape cases surfaced, according to Women and Child Development Ministry (WCD).

"We had to shut those institutes which were not fitting the standard of living for the children or violated the norms or those which were unregistered. The children who were living in those CCIs have been safely shifted to other child institutes," said a top WCD official.

In Maharashtra, 377 CCIs were closed, the highest among all states and union territories, followed by Andhra Pradesh, 78, and Telangana, 32.

Gujarat sees sharp drop in adoption in four years

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