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No Way to Treat Children

At the beginning of August, a Palestinian man opened fire on IDF soldiers at the Gaza boundary, threw an incendiary device, and attempted to breach the fence. He was killed by return fire. What made his act stand out was that the man, Hani al-Majdalawi, was employed as a nurse with Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders), one of the world’s best-known international aid organizations. Al-Majdalawi had previously been employed by both Oxfam Great Britain and the American Friends Service Committee, two of the West’s oldest NGOs. Although he was not dressed as a medical provider at the time of his attack, his act added to mounting concern that NGOs operating in the Middle East are increasingly vulnerable to infiltration by terrorists, and susceptible to being co-opted by extremist ideologies. Doctors Without Borders is currently conducting an inquiry.

In August, another alarm was sounded about the possible spread of terrorist ideology to supposedly neutral aid groups when a respected EU police mission called EUPOL COPPS, the EU Coordinating Office for Palestinian Police Support, announced it was partnering with a children’s charity, Defense for Children International-Palestine (DCI-P). EUPOL COPPS, which was founded under the auspices of the EU Special Representative for the Middle East Peace Process in 2005 and has a current budget of 12 million euros, provides assistance and training to the Palestinian Authority to improve its civil police and law enforcement capacity as part of the EU’s wider effort to work toward “a comprehensive peace, based on a two-state solution.” Though it enjoys the reputation of being a serious and professional group, on Aug. 8, EUPOL COPPS posted a notice on its Facebook page that it was hosting a workshop with DCI-P, an organization, it announced, with which it has enjoyed “a longstanding collaboration,” despite the fact that its founding members enjoy strong ties with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), which is considered to be a terrorist group by Israel, the European Union, the United States, and Canada.

There is nothing particularly subtle about the reasons why the EU itself labels the PFLP as a terrorist group. The organization was responsible for more than a dozen high-profile airline hijackings, bombings, and shootings starting in the 1960s and ’70s, including the Lod Airport massacre, in conjunction with the Japanese Red Army, which led to the deaths of 28 people. The PFLP-General Command was responsible for the hijacking of an Air France plane to Uganda in June 1976, which was ended with the successful Israeli rescue operation, Operation Thunderbolt, at Entebbe Airport. Since 2000, PFLP has carried out at least 13 suicide bombings, stabbings, shootings and ax attacks, including the murder of Israeli Minister for Tourism Rehavam Ze’evi.

Defense for Children International-Palestine’s links to the PFLP have been fulsomely documented. According to NGO Monitor, Mahmoud Jiddah, who was elected to the DCI-P board in May 2012, was imprisoned by Israel for 17 years for carrying out grenade attacks against Israeli civilians in Jerusalem in 1968, and is reported to be a member of PFLP. Hassan Abed Aljawad, another DCI-P board member up to 2018, represents the PFLP at public events. Fatima Daana, an attorney and board secretary, is said by Israeli intelligence to be the widow of Raed Nazzal, the former commander of the PFLP’s armed wing (the Abu Ali Mustafa Brigades) in Qalqilya. Nazzal led several terrorist attacks and was killed in 2002 in a shootout with IDF forces. Shawan Jabarin, a PFLP activist, was a member of DCI-P’s board of directors from 2007 to 2014, and was convicted in 1985 for recruiting members for the PFLP and arranging PFLP training outside Israel. In 1994 Jabarin was again arrested for PFLP links and placed in administrative detention for six months. Israeli authorities claim he “had not discontinued his terrorist involvement and maintains his position in the leadership of the PFLP.” Nassar Ibrahim and Dr. Majed Nassar, also on DCI-P’s board, are also both alleged to be members of PFLP. DCI-P’s latest published annual report for 2014 is dedicated to Hashem Abu Maria, one of its employees killed during a riot in July 2014. Abu Maria’s obituary was also featured on the PFLP website and in its Facebook postings, where he was described as a PFLP military commander. After the revelation of DCI-P’s terror ties by U.K. Lawyers for Israel, both Citibank and Arab Bank deactivated their online links for monetary donations to DCI-P.

So how did such a bizarre mix come about? Defense for Children International, DCI-P’s parent organization, was founded in 1979, the “Year of the Child,” for the purpose of advancing the rights of children, particularly in cases of intercountry adoptions and human trafficking. With 45 sections around the world, and an international secretariat in Geneva, DCI has an international reputation, and holds “consultative status” on the United Nations Economic and Social Council, UNICEF, UNESCO, and the Council of Europe.

Child Welfare Committee grappling with issues

CHENNAI: The Child Welfare Committee (CWC) in Chennai is grappling with a multitude of issues. While shortage of members, lack of leadership and poor infrastructure are the glaring problems, one of the essential functions — record keeping — is being completely overlooked. The lack of digitisation and safety of the records is a looming concern.

CWC clearance

Children who are left in hospitals or on street corners are referred to as ‘abandoned children’, whereas in certain cases, the mother surrenders her child and the child is referred to as ‘surrendered child’. Any placement agency will have both abandoned, or surrendered children. In the case of surrender of a child, the parents willing to surrender should execute a document ‘Free will under no compulsion to surrender the child’. As far as destitute and abandoned children are concerned, CWC has to give its clearance that the child is legally free for adoption.

Poor infrastructure

“The CWC is supposed to keep a record of all the children that are produced before it,” said an eminent child rights activist, on condition of anonymity. “In the case of abandoned or surrendered children, who go in for adoption, they have a right to know who their biological parents are. These details can be found in the case files maintained by the CWC. But, I have my doubts about how safe this confidential information is and whether sufficient care is being taken to ensure the records are in order as they do not have a proper clerical staff or adequate infrastructure.”

Written Question Sabine Verheyen EU funding Amici dei Bambini

Only online since 6 October, after AD alerted Verheyen's office that it had not been published

Parliamentary questions

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24 September 2018

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Make NOC must for couples from abroad to adopt from India: Cara

NEW DELHI: Central Adoption Resource Authority (https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/Central-Adoption-ResourceAuthority) (CARA (https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/CARA)) — India’s only designated body for child adoption — has

urged the Delhi high court to make a no-objection certificate (NOC) from the agency mandatory for any inter-country adoption.

Recently, a division bench of Chief Justice Rajendra Menon and Justice V K Rao agreed to examine the concerns raised by

CARA.

In its plea, CARA has challenged a 2016 order by a single judge for setting a wrong precedent by holding that a NOC by CARA was not needed in inter-country adoptions as long as other requirements were met.

Experts want tough laws on lucrative adoption business

Experts want tough laws on lucrative adoption business

SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 23 2018

Adoption.

Adoption. Foreign adoptions attract as much as Sh700,000 per child as legal fees for lawyers. PHOTO | FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP

In Summary

North East has emerged as hub of human trafficking in India : Mohammad Yaqoob Mir Read more at: //economictimes.indiatimes.com

Meghalaya-HC-PTI

Mohammad Yaqoob Mir said Meghalaya has the largest number of child trafficking in the coal mines areas of Jaintia Hills after Assam.

SHILLONG: Meghalaya High ..

Read more at:

//economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/65925135.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst

Woman Held For Allegedly Running Child Trafficking Racket in New Delhi

New Delhi: A 40-year-old woman identified as Kavita was arrested on Sunday from Delhi for allegedly running children selling racket. The woman apparently sold babies to childless couples at price ranging from Rs 2 Lakh to Rs 5 Lakh.

As of now, a court has sent the woman to a police remand. After the arrest, two babies were also recovered from her custody.

The Delhi police got to know about the racket when they met one of the accused last month. The accused posed as a childless couple. After the arrest was made, four children were also rescued from him subsequently.

One of the four children died at the hospital later. It was later revealed that the baby belonged to a minor girl who had become pregnant after being allegedly raped in outer Delhi, police said. More arrests were made but Kavita was on the run. She was finally arrested after she came to her house in south Delhi, they said.

It must be noted that minister of Women and Child Development Maneka Gandhi in July ordered all the states to inspect the child care homes run by the Missionaries of Charity, all over the country, in view of the recent child-selling scandal reported from a Mother Teresa institution in Jharkhand’s Ranchi. “Taking cognisance of the recent cases of illegal adoptions carried out by Missionaries of Charity in Jharkhand, Maneka Gandhi has instructed the states to get childcare homes run by Missionaries of Charity all over the country inspected immediately,” the ministry said in the statement.

Child Adoption Regulatory Authority (CARA) has allowed Live-in Partners to Adopt Children

Individuals in a live-in relationship will now be able to adopt children from and within India after India’s Nodal Adoption Agency CARA decided to withdraw a circular issued earlier this year disallowing them from doing so.

Child Adoption Regulatory Authority (CARA), in a circular issued on May 31, barred the applicants in a live-in relationship from adopting a child on the ground that “Authority would like children to be placed only with a stable family and individuals in a live-in relationship cannot be considered as stable family.”

Women and Child Development Ministry, R.K. Shrivastava told The Hindu that,“We have decided to withdraw circular and applications from prospective adoptive parents will be examined on a case-by-case basis”.

Decision was taken at last meeting of Steering Committee of CARA, chaired by Mr. Shrivastava, in August, and will benefit both domestic and international applicants.

Eligibility criteria under Adoption Regulations, 2017, permit single women to adopt a child of any gender, while single men can adopt only boys.

Central Adoption Resource Agency team in Arunachal to promote adoption

Itanagar, Sept 20: Chairman, Advisory Committee of Central Adoption Resource Agency (CARA) and Member NCPCR, Ramachandra Reddy and members (Advisory Committee) Nsha Jha and Dr G Sreenuis are on a three-day visit to Arunachal Pradesh for promoting adoption in the state.

During their tour that started on Tuesday, the team visited the Specialized Adoption Agency (SAA) and Children Home run by Oju Welfare Association (OWA), an official release informed here on Thursday.

The visiting team was accompanied by T P Loyi, Director Women and Child Development and Dani Yami, Deputy Director (ICDS), Yupia, Lenzing Tagi, CDPO (HQs) and staff of District Child Protection Unit, Yupia.

Besides interacting with the children of the Child Care Institutions (CCI), the Central team also visited the infants of SAA and expressed satisfaction over the facilities being provided.

They praised Ratan Anya, chairperson OWA for her efforts and assured guidance and all possible support to strengthen the SAA in the State. Thereafter, the team paid visit to the CCI run by Missionaries of Charity and inspected its functioning, and also interacted with the children. In an interactive session was held with District Child Protection Officer, staff of District Child Protection Unit, NGOs running CCIs and CWC members for promoting adoption as per provisions of Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act 2015. The team also called on Women and Child Development Minister Nabam Rebia and Commissioner WCD.