Home  

Trafficking case: Order on reuniting children with caregivers recalled

The ordeal of children illegally adopted from a maternity home in Mysuru by childless couples is far from over.

Four months after a city court gave interim custody of three children to couples who had adopted them illegally by paying money, the order has been recalled. This follows an appeal filed by the Mysuru district Child Welfare Committee (CWC).

The Principal Senior Chief Judicial Magistrate’s court in Mysuru has directed the caregivers to hand over custody of the children to the CWC. Two of the children are girls, aged six and seven, while one is a boy aged less than three.

Notice to caregivers

Based on the court order dated August 4, CWC has issued notices to the caregivers to immediately hand over custody of the children. While the six-year-old girl is with her caregivers in Thrissur in Kerala, the boy is with his caregivers in Dakshina Kannada. The seven-year-old girl is in Mysuru.

Probe into SOS Village 'sex assault'

Guwahati: The Assam State Commission for Protection of Child Rights (ASCPCR) is conducting an inquiry into the alleged sexual assault on three inmates of the SOS Children's Village here at Borjhar.

Police on Thursday arrested the assistant director of SOS Children's Village, Loon Vaiphei, 44, on the charge of sexually abusing the minors and registered a case against him at Azara police station under Section 10 of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (Pocso) Act, 2012.

The commission's chairperson, Sunita Changkakati, said a three-member team of the commission led by Rupa Hazarika visited the SOS Village on Monday and spoke to the victims, officials of the village and police.

ADVERTISING

Changkakati said though the police promptly registered the case and arrested the accused, they did not conduct the medical examination of the victims till the team visited the village on Monday. "The victims were also not produced before the Child Welfare Committee," she said.

One is Chinese. One is American. How a journalist discovered and reunited identical twins

On a cold afternoon in 2017, I was fighting off the urge for a nap when a message popped up on Facebook:

Ms. Demick. You contacted me a long time ago? Are you still interested in talking with me? If so, my family and I are interested.

I was the New York correspondent for the Los Angeles Times and was exhausted from covering the aftermath of the presidential inauguration. I tapped out a curt reply, saying I didn’t know who he was.

My mom adopted a little Chinese girl years ago … and it appears like she has a twin sister still in China.

I bolted upright. Of course I hadn’t forgotten.

The Muslim family had sought guardianship of the girl they had been taken care of as a family member since her biological mother

Recently the Bombay high court reunited a 14-year-old Hindu girl with the four-member Muslim family that brought her up ever since her biological mother abandoned her.

Justice Gautam Patel of Bombay high court ignored the biological mother’s plea for her custody primarily on the ground that the woman was involved in some immoral activity.

The girl was handed over the foster family on July 24.

The Muslim family filed a Petition in the high court, seeking guardianship of the girl. They contended that she had been living with them and has been taken care of as a family member since her biological mother abandoned her and moved to Kanpur.

The Petitioner Family complained that the biological mother returned to Mumbai and demanded the girl’s custody. They said the biological mother and one of her male friends had forcibly taken away the girl. The girl was brought back only after the petitioners approached the Child Welfare Committee.

Hyderabad: 36 kids forced to beg, orphanage owners held

Hyderabad: The Golconda Police on Monday rescued 36 children, including 30 boys and six girls, from an unregistered orphanage in Rajendranagar, and handed them over to the Women and Child Welfare department.

According to the police, the children were rescued from Dove Orphan Children Home at Gandhamguda. “They were in the age group of six to eight years. The owners of home, Esther Rani and Ramesh, used to force the children to beg at public places such as Golconda Fort in the name of raising funds,” police said.

A case was booked against them, after which they were arrested and produced in court. They were remanded in judicial custody.

.

1,991 kids; 20,000 prospective parents: Adoption scene in India Read more at: //economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/65278

The highest number of children available for adoption is from Maharashtra at 376 followed by Odisha at 299, according to an RTI reply.

On a query on the number of children available for adoption in 2017-18, it was informed that the figure is 1,991 including 1,322 girls.

Rakesh Srivastava, secretary in the Ministry of Women and ..

Read more at:

//economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/65278454.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst

Illegale adoptie in Nederland

Nikhil Bhardwaj

Tribune News Service

Ludhiana, August 4

In a major development in the case of adoption of an 11-year-old girl by a couple and her rape by her adoptive father, the police have found that the girl was handed over to the accused couple without following any legal procedure by either party.

The girl’s real mother as well as the middlemen who facilitated her adoption may face action for illegally handing over the girl to strangers.

No adoption procedure followed by either party

Nikhil Bhardwaj

Tribune News Service

Ludhiana, August 4

In a major development in the case of adoption of an 11-year-old girl by a couple and her rape by her adoptive father, the police have found that the girl was handed over to the accused couple without following any legal procedure by either party.

The girl’s real mother as well as the middlemen who facilitated her adoption may face action for illegally handing over the girl to strangers.

Retired PCS Officer Jatinder Pal Singh appointed Chairman of Child Welfare Committee, Ludhiana

Ludhiana, August 02, 2018: As per the orders of Punjab government, a new Child Welfare Committee has been constituted for District Ludhiana under the Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act 2015. Mr Jatinder Pal Singh PCS (retired) has been appointed chairman of the committee while Tarsem Bahia, Sanjay Maheshwari, Baldev Singh and Raminder Kaur have been appointed as members.The new committee joined today and started the work with its first meeting on the same day.The chairman addressed the staff and the members and advised to work for the welfare of children in Ludhiana.

.