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Mom awaits Supreme Court nod 6 years after adoption

Mom awaits Supreme Court nod 6 years after adoption

Dhananjay Mahapatra,TNN | Apr 15, 2015, 04.33 AM IST

READ MORE Supreme Court|Mytreyi Bharadwaj|Laxmikant Pandey Case|Central Adoption Resource Authority|Bimala's Adoption Case

NEW DELHI: Mytreyi Bharadwaj migrated to Canada with her parents 43 years ago. For the last six years, she has been making frequent trips to India hoping to take her adopted daughter Bimala, living in a Kolkata orphanage, back with her to Toronto. Every time, she returns to Canada empty-handed.

Mytreyi Bharadwaj migrated to Canada with her parents 43 years ago. For the last six years, she has been making frequent trips to India hoping to take her adopted daughter Bimala, living in a Kolkata orphanage, back with her to Toronto. Every time, she returns to Canada empty-handed.

Child adoption in Kenya frustrating, says MP

Child adoption in Kenya frustrating, says MP

By LABAN WANAMBISI | April 15, 2015

Lay had to pause several times as she was seconding debate on the In-Vitro-Fertilization Bill which seeks to formalise the alternative modes of conception through the establishment of an authority/file

Lay had to pause several times as she was seconding debate on the In-Vitro-Fertilization Bill which seeks to formalise the alternative modes of conception through the establishment of an authority/file

NAIROBI, Kenya, Apr 15 – Taita Taveta County Woman Representative Joyce Lay was on the verge of tears as she narrated to the National Assembly her experience in attempts to have a child through adoption.

Family blocked in Santo Domingo

Google Translation

Family blocked in Santo Domingo

Montecosaro, chaos in adoptions: couple with two children can not go back. They are there since November

Franco Veroli

Macerata, April 15, 2015 - RETURN delayed to Italy - no one knows when - for a couple of Montecosaro, blocked in the Dominican Republic , where they had adopted two children, because of a couple of stamps. "The procedure for the adoption was completed. But we need visas on documents of children, which must be issued by the Italian consulate, "explains Robert Corsalini and Maria Luisa Capomasi.

PETI Committe - request for study

It was agreed that the Policy Department would draft a study on adoption without

consent.

http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?pubRef=-%2f%2fEP%2f%2fNONSGML%2bCOMPARL%2bPE-557.330%2b01%2bDOC%2bPDF%2bV0%2f%2fEN

8K Download

Attachment IP C PETI IC 2015 089 ADOPTION WITHOUT CONSENT.pdf

Inspiring Neighbors: The Families of Celina Baldwin and Amanda Purvis

Celina Baldwin and Amanda Purvis didn’t realize getting their nails done that afternoon at Perry Nails would change their lives for the better. Looking back, it was fate that brought these two women together upon remembering that day.

Sitting at neighboring booths, it seemed natural to strike up a conversation. Baldwin recalls, “She was next to me at the nail salon and as we were talking, she told me she had adopted kids. Then I said that we were adopting too – that’s how we connected.” Coincidentally, they also came to find out that they lived in the same neighborhood, their houses a stone’s throw from one another.

As the conversation progressed, they realized they shared the same sense of humor, faith, and a passion to see children in loving families.

For the Baldwins, they began to think about the possibility of adopting after trying for several years to have a child on their own. Their decision to look at adopting children from outside the country was heavily influenced by Andy’s sister. At the time, she was volunteering in the Congo and told them about the number of orphans she saw there. “His sister was working in the Congo and alerted us to the orphan crisis. After that, Congo and international adoption went hand in hand for us,” she said.

After choosing to adopt from outside the U.S., the Baldwins expenses began to add up quickly. “The agency you go through can charge you whatever they want. There’s no regulation on what they can make you pay for the adoption,” In addition to paying an agency, once country fees and travel expenses are tacked on, a family can foot a total bill between $15,000 and $60,000.

OTKRIVAMO I earned on the adoption of children

OTKRIVAMO I earned on the adoption of children

Zorica Lazarevic | 14th 04. 2015-21: 56h

| Comments: 131

Reporters 'Blic' during research on adoption discovered the secret hidden for four years of Serbian children with disabilities by the doctor from Belgrade practically sold for adoption to foreigners for $ 8,000.

Photo Casey and Sofia announce with the consent of the family Kalvarezi

Uncertain future for parents with disabilities

(translation from Danish)

Uncertain future for parents with disabilities

April 13, 2015

The new principled judgment on forced adoption of a daughter from her brain-damaged mother. The Department is concerned about the future for parents with disabilities.

The High Court has chosen to affirm the District Court's decision in a case of a brain-damaged mother and her daughter by which the municipality wanted to forced adoption. This means that the 8-year-old girl will now be forced to be adopted by the foster family. Matter of principle, because it is one of the first cases of forced adoption services for a child with a mother with disabilities.

Cambodian Orphans Yearn for Answers 40 Years After Fleeing the Khmer Rouge

Cambodian Orphans Yearn for Answers 40 Years After Fleeing the Khmer Rouge

Abby Seiff April 13, 2015

Young Cambodian child at a hospital in Phnom Penh, in March 1975.

Francoise Demulder—AFP/Getty Images

Young Cambodian child at a hospital in Phnom Penh, in March 1975.

No appetite to uncover scale of illegal adoption scandal

No appetite to uncover scale of illegal adoption scandal

Monday, April 13, 2015

By Conall Ó Fátharta

Irish Examiner Reporter

Calls for an audit of all the files held by accredited adoption agencies and by the State, so that the full scale of illegal adoptions and birth registrations can be uncovered, have always fallen on deaf ears, writes Conall Ó Fátharta

Parliament gives approval to changes in Indian Adoption of Children Bill

joint committee of Parliament has given its approval to changes in the Indian Adoption of Children Bill which after going to the Union Cabinet has been presented to both the Houses in the monsoon session of Parliament. The Bill will make adoption of children legal among all communities in the country.

At present only Hindus have a law which permits a couple to take a child and make him their legal heir. This law only places the child in the foster care of adults and does not bestow upon him the right of inheritance. It also does not guard the parents against losing the child, as they are legally only its guardians.

This Bill, which smoothens out the many legal twists that prevents destitute children from being adopted by a proper home, was drafted twelve years ago. The Bill was finally introduced in Parliament, not got legislative sanction so far, due to filibustering by members who saw in it the opening of the flood gate for Indian children going abroad as cheap labour.

The Indian Council for Child Welfare, a leading organization that handles adoption, helped 99 parents between 1963 and 1973 to take up destitute and orphan children under foster care. Of these, only 11 were Indian couples and the rest were from Sweden, France, West Germany, USA and Belgium.

Under Indian law, none of the children going abroad were legally "adopted" before they left the country. They were only placed in foster care of the families which finally adopted them under their country's law. The new Bill makes a district court the authority to pass an "Adoption order". In the case of foreigners it will issue an interim order which will have to be finalized by the adoption law of the land of the parents.