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‘Those Kids Are No Longer Yours’: An Investigation into Uganda’s Adoption Market (Lying in Court)

How parents lose their children to families in the United States.

It takes an entire day, and costs a small fortune, for Florence Babirye to get from her home in the ugandan village of Kasolwe to the Kayunga police station. First there’s a motorbike taxi from the village to the nearest bus stop, then a bus to Kamuli town, a Nile crossing by ferry, and a long walk. At the police station, she inquires again about her daughter, and her niece and nephew, who have been taken away to America. But the answer she gets is always the same: The children are no longer yours.

In her picturesque village, where chickens scratch among the flower beds and generations live side by side, Florence shared the responsibility for bringing up her kids with her sisters, Jenipher Rubuga and Mariam Nakiranda; extended families tend to be very involved in raising children in Uganda. The three sisters had a total of 16 kids, who moved freely between their homes in neighboring villages. But in 2012, Mariam’s husband died, and she moved to work in the town of Mpunge, in Mukono district, several hours away by bus. Florence’s long hours at a restaurant made it difficult to look after her 4-year-old daughter, Rose Patience, so when Mariam offered to take her in, Florence readily agreed.

When Rose first went to stay with Mariam, Florence didn’t own a phone, so she kept tabs on her daughter via friends and relatives. Through this grapevine, Florence heard that Mariam had met a pastor who said he could find a sponsor to cover Rose’s fees at a boarding school where he served as a director. The three sisters had often talked about wanting a better education for their children. Once she heard about her sister’s decision, Jenipher decided to entrust her two toddlers, Fatiya and Kirya, to Mariam so they could be educated, too.

At first, Florence and Jenipher were happy with the arrangement: With only their older children to look after, they could work the hours they needed. They believed that their three little ones had been placed at a boarding school in Entebbe, an hour from the Ugandan capital of Kampala. It seemed like a stroke of luck.

Another adoption controversy hits Bhopal agency Udaan, this time it’s from Bahrain

SANYA DHINGRA 10 October, 2018 12:04 pm IST

Children

Representational image | Pixabay

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Bahrain couple, who adopted 8-year old girl from Bhopal adoption agency Udaan in July, now wants to send her back as she is displaying ‘violent behaviour’.

Helen Anitha vs The Inspector Of Police on 10 October, 2018

Madras High Court

Helen Anitha vs The Inspector Of Police on 10 October, 2018

BEFORE THE MADURAI BENCH OF MADRAS HIGH COURT

Dated: 10.10.2018

ORDERS RESERVED ON : 08.10.2018

Two children adopted after HSCCW approval

Two children namely Pulkit and Devvrat find their new home as Haryana State Council for Child Welfare (HSCCW), Panchkula on Wednesday gave them up for adoption to two different families.

Director, State Institute of Health and Family Welfare, Haryana, Sonia Trikha Khullar handed over the custody of Pulkit to an American couple and Devvrat to a family from Ambala Cantt. Both children were handed over to the couples after completing all documents of Central Adoption Resource Authority (CARA).

Since 1982, the Haryana State Council for Child Welfare has so far handed over 523 children to new families including 371 across the country and 152 abroad. Sonia Trikha Khullar said it was a proud moment for her as Pulkit and Devvrat has found their new home. She said that the HSCCW has been doing a commendable job for the welfare of children.

Louisville preacher helping hundreds of orphans in Africa

Dr. Gardiner Gentry founded Malawian orphanage in 2003


LOUISVILLE, Ky. —

When my husband and I decided to adopt, we had no idea Kentucky had a very special connection to an orphanage on the other side of the world, in Malawi.

We were years into the process when we learned the founders of our daughters’ orphanage, Gardiner and Alice Gentry, lived in Louisville.

 

Bombay High Court Vatsalya Trust vs Marino Pietro And Occhetta ... on 3 October, 2018

901-FAP36-18.DOC

Shephali

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBAY

ORDINARY ORIGINAL CIVIL JURISDICTION

FOREIGN ADOPTION PETITION NO. 36 OF 2018

"Von unserer Familie ist nichts übrig"

"There is nothing left of our family"

Every year thousands of babies severely damaged by alcohol are born. Adoptive parents despair of these barely educable children - and feel betrayed by the youth welfare offices that keep the problems secret.

This text comes from the series SPIEGEL + Bestseller. It first appeared in September 2018.

In the evening, the Peukert family's answering machine flashed. "Please call us back, here is a girl who needs parents," said a member of the Paderborn youth welfare office on the tape.

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