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MALTESE COUPLE GET HC NOD TO ADOPT KID FROM BENGALURU'S KR PURAM ORPHANAGE

After a couple from Malta was denied permission to adopt a one-year-old from an orphanage in KR Puram, they moved the High Court and finally got the go-ahead to add ‘Nicholas Dhruva Schembri’ to their family of four.

The High Court allowed Joseph and Deborah Schembri to adopt the boy who lives in Shishu Mandir, KR Puram, setting aside a lower court order that had barred from adoption on the grounds of age, income and cultural differences. It said that the lower court had “acted illegally and with material irregularity” in the case.

The couple had filed a petition before the LVII Additional City Civil and Sessions Judge under the Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, seeking to adopt, Dhruva. The couple has been married since 1995 and has two children, born in 1998 and 2000. Looking to add to their family, the two had obtained permission from the Ministry of Family and Social Solidarity in Malta for adoption.

The issue reached the HC when the petition was rejected by the civil court on the grounds that the “adoption was not in the best interest of the child” as the couple were aged 44 years each and had grown children “and that it is a complete family; and there is no reason or necessity for them to adopt a child”.

The couple’s advocate submitted that the lower court had failed to consider their affidavits that “stated that they undertake to bring up the child as their own son and to give him a good home and sound education and to look after his physical, mental and moral well-being”. The home study report had stated that the couple was financially stable and able to cope with the expenses related to maintaining a family. This was also overlooked by the trial court, the HC was told.

Gurgaon: Child care centre’s caretaker arrested after evading arrest for four months

The CCI came under the scanner in February this year for accepting two minor girls and releasing them for adoption against the rules of the Juvenile Justice Act 2015.

The CCI came under the scanner in February this year for accepting two minor girls and releasing them for adoption against the rules of the Juvenile Justice Act 2015.(Parveen Kumar/HT FILE)

The 65-year-old caretaker of a child care Institute (CCI) in Gurgaon was arrested on Sunday night on charges of handing over children under her custody for adoption against the norms. She is also accused of child trafficking and was booked under relevant sections of the Juvenile Justice Act and the IPC.

Sister Lilly Baretto was arrested from a church in Sukhdev Vihar, Delhi, on Sunday night after technical surveillance, said the police. She had been evading arrest for last three months and had changed several locations and mobile numbers.

The CCI came under the scanner in February this year for accepting two minor girls and releasing them for adoption against the rules of the Juvenile Justice Act 2015.

Gurgaon: Child care centre’s caretaker arrested after evading arrest for four months

The CCI came under the scanner in February this year for accepting two minor girls and releasing them for adoption against the rules of the Juvenile Justice Act 2015.

The CCI came under the scanner in February this year for accepting two minor girls and releasing them for adoption against the rules of the Juvenile Justice Act 2015.(Parveen Kumar/HT FILE)

The 65-year-old caretaker of a child care Institute (CCI) in Gurgaon was arrested on Sunday night on charges of handing over children under her custody for adoption against the norms. She is also accused of child trafficking and was booked under relevant sections of the Juvenile Justice Act and the IPC.

Sister Lilly Baretto was arrested from a church in Sukhdev Vihar, Delhi, on Sunday night after technical surveillance, said the police. She had been evading arrest for last three months and had changed several locations and mobile numbers.

The CCI came under the scanner in February this year for accepting two minor girls and releasing them for adoption against the rules of the Juvenile Justice Act 2015.

Nun who ran city orphanage held, sent to judicial custody

Baretto had earlier denied the charges

Baretto had earlier denied the charges

GURUGRAM: Sister Lily Baretto, who ran a shelter home in Gurgaon for years and was awarded in 2013 by the district administration for her work in the field of child care, was arrested in Delhi on Sunday and sent to judicial custody for 14 days by a city court on Monday.

Sister Baretto, a social worker who ran the orphanage, Ujjwal Niketan, for nearly two decades before it was shut down earlier this year, had been booked on charges of illegally handing over two children for adoption, and for "cruel treatment" of inmates at the orphanage. She had denied the charges in an earlier interaction with TOI.

An FIR had been filed against her at Sector 10 police station. Her anticipatory bail plea filed in the district court had been denied in July. Charges of human trafficking were later added, according to the police. Baretto has also been accused of cruelty to children by making them work at the orphanage (under section 75 of the Juvenile Justice Act) and section 420 (cheating) of the IPC in the FIR registered against her.

Maltese couple get HC nod to adopt kid from Bengaluru's KR Puram orphanage

After a couple from Malta was denied permission to adopt a one-year-old from an orphanage in KR Puram, they

moved the High Court and finally got the go-ahead to add ‘Nicholas Dhruva Schembri’ to their family of four.

The High Court allowed Joseph and Deborah Schembri to adopt the boy who lives in Shishu Mandir, KR Puram,

setting aside a lower court order that had barred from adoption on the grounds of age, income and cultural

differences. It said that the lower court had “acted illegally and with material irregularity” in the case.

The 52-year-old is facing deportation to India after the boy was stabbed by hitmen

Arti Dhir, 52, was arrested after an Interpol alert and faces a deportation hearing to India on suspicion of child murder.

Arti Dhir was arrested by Interpol and is accused on plotting the murder of her adopted son

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Arti Dhir was arrested by Interpol and is accused on plotting the murder of her adopted son

Indian prosecutors allege Dhir, who worked at Heathrow Airport, was behind the brutal killing of her adopted 12-year-old son Gopal Ajani.

Holy Cross Home For Babies By ... vs State Of Maharashtra Thr. ... on 29 August, 2017 Bench: V.M. Deshpande

Judgment

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IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBAY,

NAGPUR BENCH, NAGPUR

Still, ‘Poskem: Goans in the Shadows’ makes a strong point about the power of exclusion.

Still, ‘Poskem: Goans in the Shadows’ makes a strong point about the power of exclusion.

The villages of Goa, long ignored by tourists and outsiders, yet much-discovered in recent times by the owners of second homes and by artists in residence, remain secretive places. Stone lions perch beside the gates of so-called Portugese villas, which are set back in overgrown gardens, with their tiled roofs pulled over their heads. Dogs bark at passing strangers, who are nevertheless likely to find the scenes enchanting, and the ubiquity of the pets a sign of warmth and homeliness.

Later, however, they might hear stories of maggots festering in untended wounds, of animals tied to chains all day, because they have been kept for a purpose, and little else. It is difficult to reconcile such things with the outward beauty of the village houses; the smiling, if wary, people; and the abounding festivity of the villages themselves. But they are all aspects of Goan reality.

Fashion designer and writer Wendell Rodricks, who, in the early 1990s, anticipated a trend by being one of the first well-travelled and urbanised Goans to move back to his village home, is well-placed to bring its secrets to light. He explains that his friendship with his Goan neighbour, Rosa, prompted him to write this book, as a kind of tribute-cum-apology for what she had endured.

Rosa was a poskem, the Konkani word for “adopted child”, but one laden with pejorative and discriminatory connotations. For these abandoned children, taken in by well-off families, were then brought up as servants. “For the outside world”, says Rodricks elsewhere, “it seemed like they were treated with love and care despite not belonging to the family bloodline. In reality, they were treated as bonded labour, weren’t allowed to marry so they would be in servitude always, and were not given salaries or inheritance despite being given the family name.”