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"Adopted children are too often presented as a commodity '

"Adopted children are too often presented as a commodity '

16 March 2016 by Veerle Beel

The Flemish Children's Commissioner Bruno Vanobbergen requests the adoption agencies to take images of potential adoptees offline.

After foreign adoptions in recent months occurred more frequently in the news because of problems, now the Flemish children's commissioner finalised his advice.

You ask to get to adopt photos of children online. What bothers those photos?

A Beautiful Dream for India (HOLT)

A Beautiful Dream for India

Posted on March 16, 2016 by Robin Munro Comment

Jim with Children copy

Meet Jim De, Holt’s new India country director! From caring for foster children in his childhood home, to finding families for children orphaned by the 2004 tsunami, to greeting Holt adoptive families at the Delhi airport, he has always followed his life’s passion — advocating for his country’s orphaned and abandoned children.

It was 2:00 a.m. and 7-year-old Jim De sat awake in his home with his mother. She changed a baby’s diaper while he held another one in his arms, feeding her a bottle of formula. Tonight was their turn for “night duty,” a task in which they stayed up all night to care for the 30-40 children living in the care center that the De family ran out of their home. Jim and his mother were on night duty about once a week — and he loved it!

A Beautiful Dream for India

Meet Jim De, Holt’s new India country director! From caring for foster children in his childhood home, to finding families for children orphaned by the 2004 tsunami, to greeting Holt adoptive families at the Delhi airport, he has always followed his life’s passion — advocating for his country’s orphaned and abandoned children.

It was 2:00 a.m. and 7-year-old Jim De sat awake in his home with his mother. She changed a baby’s diaper while he held another one in his arms, feeding her a bottle of formula. Tonight was their turn for “night duty,” a task in which they stayed up all night to care for the 30-40 children living in the care center that the De family ran out of their home. Jim and his mother were on night duty about once a week — and he loved it!

“I was very excited about doing that kind of stuff,” Jim says now, during his visit from India to Holt’s headquarters in Eugene, Oregon. “It was so much fun to stay up all night — but by 4:00 in the morning, you were out!”

Throughout his years growing up in India, serving children — growing up with them as friends and welcoming them into his home as family — was a normal part of his life. Jim’s father worked as treasurer for the Church of North India and his mother was involved with child welfare organizations. What started as his family fostering just one child — Tom, who needed somewhere to stay while his international adoption was finalized — soon turned into the De family fostering many children out of their home and eventually opening up an official care center for these children.

“They were my friends,” Jim says. “For us, it was exciting! There was always a new child in the house, a new friend — we always welcomed them.”

Supreme Court wants foolproof rules for adoption

The court was disposing off a PIL by NGO Advait Foundation seeking a moratorium on foreigners adopting Indian children, alleging that many children who are illegally taken away faced post-adoption abuse.


Observing that children required to be protected from abuse and trafficking, the Supreme Court on Monday directed the Centre to frame effective regulations within three months for making inter-country adoptions foolproof and transparent.

This was after the Ministry for Child and Women Development and Central Adoption Research Agency (CARA) told SC that a legal framework for intra and intercountry adoption has been provided in the Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2015 which came into effect from January 15. The rules and regulations are yet to be framed by CARA, the nodal agency for adoption, which also has to issue certain directions to state governments.

"We are told that the new Act is a comprehensive legislation on subjects involving care and protection of children including adoption. So a legislative framework is there but some regulations are required to make it effective. We hope and trust the authorities concerned take speedy steps. Children are to be protected against abuse and trafficking. The beneficial legislation may be made more effective to provide succor to children who may be adopted by framing necessary rules and regulations," said a bench headed by Chief Justice TS Thakur.

"Central government shall expeditiously frame model rules. The centre shall also take up matter with state government. Interest of children is supreme whether it is in-country or intercountry adoption. The mechanism should be effective, transparent and credible," said the bench.

'Meeting my mother after 42 years was a miracle'

'Meeting my mother after 42 years was a miracle'

By Geeta Pandey

BBC News, Delhi

14 March 2016

Elisabet Purve-Jorendal was born in India and given away for adoption in 1973 when she was less than six months old.

Ogni tre giorni restituito un bimbo. Così falliscono le adozioni in Italia

Ogni tre giorni restituito un bimbo. Così falliscono le adozioni in Italia

Bugie e genitori lasciati soli: cento famiglie l’anno si arrendono. La commissione del governo accusa i troppi enti, ma non vigila

Attraverso il sistema nazionale lo scorso anno sono stati adottati mille bambini. Altrettanti sono stati dati in affido preadottivo. Dall’estero sono entrati circa duemila bimbi in Italia

13/03/2016

ANDREA MALAGUTI

Adoption internationale en RDC: 600 enfants autorisés à quitter le pays

Adoption internationale en RDC: 600 enfants autorisés à quitter le pays

10.03.2016,

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Le vice-Premier ministre et ministre de l'Intérieur, Evariste Boshab.

Six cents enfants congolais adoptés par des couples étrangers ont été autorisés à quitter la République démocratique du Congo, où ils attendent depuis plus de deux ans et demi, a-t-on indiqué mercredi de source officielle.

Small child found hidden in plane passenger’s carry-on luggage

Small child found hidden in plane passenger’s carry-on luggage

The woman placed the child at her feet under a blanket – but the girl was discovered when she needed to go to the toilet.

18 hours ago 39,444 Views 22 Comments Share218 Tweet Email11

Image: Philippe Noret - Wikimedia Commons

A WOMAN WHO flew into Paris from Istanbul this week was found to have hidden a four-year-old girl in a bag on the plane, Air France has confirmed.