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Organizations fear forced the adoption of the disabled children

DENMARK KL. 05:32

Organizations fear forced the adoption of the disabled children

Rødovre Municipality may become the first in the country to be forced adopt a disabled mother's child. It is of great concern to disability organizations.

By: Naja Dandanell, Berlingske News

Land Court during the summer to decide whether a young brain-damaged mom can keep in touch with her ??seven year old daughter, or whether the girl should adoptable of the foster family, she has lived with since she was a baby. The signs told the paper. This is the first time in recent history that a child of a disabled person can end up being given up for adoption against the parents' will. The case is also fundamental because it may set a precedent for similar cases in the future. And the very fact of great concern among the country's disability organizations who fear that the case of Rødovre will pave the way for a practice of adoption services for disabled children. "We view the matter with great concern that it will be the first of many. This is not just an attack on the parents, but also very much on the kids, "said Chairman of the LEV, Sytter Kristensen, told the paper. Chairman of the Danish Disability organizations Stig Langvad believe that the case can be seen as the latest of many examples of a growing resentment against people with disabilities in Denmark. "We have the last 10 years have witnessed a disturbing trend in society's view of people with disabilities. The savings have been massive and tone of the public debate heavily brutalized even among politicians who insinuates that disabled parasites on society and cost us dearly. We also see an increase in discrimination and outright vandalism against people with disabilities. This is the latest example of its kind. And here you go even up close and declare a group of Danish citizens unfit to enter into a relationship with their biological children, "said Stig Langvad the newspaper. , the law from 2009 says that according told the paper that children can be set for adoption if the parents' inability to even take care of their children stand to change.

Authority admits thousands of adoptions illegal

Authority admits thousands of adoptions illegal

Monday, July 07, 2014

By Claire O’Sullivan and Conall Ó Fátharta

Thousands of Irish people "must have been" illegally adopted, with many taken out of the country, the Adoption Authority (AAI) has admitted.

The controversial claims clash with statements from the then children’s minister and now justice minister, Frances Fitzgerald, who told the Dáil last year that every adoption carried out by the State was legal.

Lumos goes global in its mission to liberate 8m children from institutional harm

 

·         07.04.14

Lumos goes global in its mission to liberate 8m children from institutional harm

http://www.wearelumos.org/sites/default/files/iStock_000000747217Small.jpg

LUMOS - JK Rowling’s children’s charity – has become a key member of an international coalition campaigning to stop the funding of orphanages around the world.

 

It has joined the Global Alliance for Children, whose aims include harnessing international aid to support countries in their efforts to move children out of large institutions and into family and community-based care. The U.S. Agency for International Development  (USAID) and the U.S. Department of Labour are partners of the Global Alliance for Children, as are the World Bank and the Canadian Government, along with foundations in the US, Sweden and Switzerland.

 

Founded by the Harry Potter author in 2005, Lumos’ mission is based on decades of research showing that children in institutions, who are deprived of loving parental care, suffer life-long physical and psychological harm.  Babies, in particular, fail to develop as they should without one-to-one parental interaction.

 

Working with other groups, Lumos last year won a significant political victory in persuading the European Union to pass laws ensuring that EU social inclusion-related funding within Europe must be used to support the “transition from institutional to community-based care”, rather than building or refurbishing so-called orphanages. Deinstitutionalisation is now established as a key EU funding priority in Europe.

 

The EU is also one of the world’s largest donors of humanitarian and development aid. Lumos believes the funding principle it helped to establish in Europe can be applied globally - wherever EU funds and those of Global Alliance members are used - as a ‘lever’ to drive the transformation of child care in nations which still rely on institutions and orphanages. It will work with Global Alliance members including USAID – another significant donor – to promote a similar approach in development aid.

 

As a first step, on April 8, in Brussels, Lumos – with Claude Moraes, Labour MEP for London – will bring influential European Commission figures and MEPs together, for the first time in the same room, with leading US and international members of the Global Alliance.

 

These include Prof Neil Boothby, who as the U.S. Government Special Advisor and Senior USAID Co-ordinator, launched the U.S. Government Action Plan on Children in Adversity, in 2012. They will take part in a round-table discussion at the European Parliament, entitled A Global Approach to Ending the Institutionalisation of Children - How the EU and the USA can join forces to help children in adversity around the world. The US Government commitment in this area is articulated in its Action Plan on Children in Adversity, which was launched from the White House. There are an estimated eight million children in institutions and orphanages world-wide, including around one million in the European region due to the post-Communist legacy of State institutionalisation of children. More than 90% of children in so-called orphanages have living relatives.  Many are there because they are disabled, or have poor parents who cannot cope.

 

Research suggests that institutionalisation is increasing in some parts of the world, outside Europe. Lumos has recognised that it is, in effect, challenging a decades-old belief that ‘orphanages are good for children’ and that this may be a difficult message for staff who work, often voluntarily, in orphanages, as well as the millions who donate to charities supporting them.

 

However, Georgette Mulheir, the Chief Executive Officer of Lumos and a 20-year veteran of working to close institutions in counties such as Romania, said: “There are eight million children around the world living in institutions, so this is not just a European problem.  It is a global issue and our response to it must be global, which is why Lumos is looking to extend our experience and track record to other countries outside of Europe in order to help more children back into their families and communities.”

 

“The evidence is incontrovertible that institutionalised care harms children and that there is a better way, based on care in supported families and in the community, including in mainstream schools. If deinstitutionalisation and family and community care are the right approach for children in Europe, then they are the right approach for children around the world. And the Global Alliance is a great opportunity to achieve that goal."

 

Lumos has already trained thousands of doctors, nurses, social workers, lawyers and teachers and politicians in European countries in the skills needed to support families with disabled children in the community.

 

The core message of the Global Alliance for Children is that more than 200 million children in low- and middle-income countries are failing to reach their full developmental potential because they lack sufficient nutrition, health and family care, or a safe environment.  The Alliance’s key aims are to reduce the number of children who:

·         are not meeting key developmental milestones;

·         live outside of family care, promoting ‘economic household level strengthening’, positive parenting, de-institutionalisation and safe and permanent family care; or

·         experience violence, exploitation, and abuse. 

 

The 200 million includes the eight million children who grow up in institutions. They are disproportionately affected by illness, poverty and unemployment when they grow up, and are more likely to have a criminal record or be victims of crimes such as sex trafficking and sexual abuse.

 

Charles Gardner, Executive Director of the Global Alliance for Children, praised Lumos’ work on deinstitutionalisation: “Current global efforts to address young children’s essential needs are fragmented.  Millions of children suffer from our lack of coordination. The Alliance was created to address this challenge, and we are delighted to count Lumos among the key thought leaders and funders in the Alliance as we join forces to improve children’s lives. Orphanages should be viewed as relics of the past, like poor houses and debtor’s prisons.”

 

Lumos’ membership of the Global Alliance for Children marks a significant period of expansion for the London-based charity, which was founded by JK Rowling after she was troubled by a newspaper article about the institutionalisation of children in a Central European nation.

 

As part of its expansion, Lumos has appointed Sir Roger Singleton CBE - one of Britain’s foremost experts on safeguarding children and former Chief Executive of Barnardo’s - as Managing Director, providing the opportunity for CEO Georgette Mulheir to focus on Lumos’ growing work at the global level. Sir Roger was knighted for his services to child protection in 2006.Lumos currently works in Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Moldova and Ukraine. It has helped 12,000 children to move from harmful institutions into safe, caring family environments; saved the lives of more than 430 children suffering from malnutrition, neglect or lack of access to surgery; and trained over 15,000 professionals. It has also helped ensure that €357m in EU funding has been spent on dismantling institutions and not on building new ones.

 

The charity’s success in working with the Moldovan Government is particularly important, as it shows that with the right support one of the world’s poorest countries can transform its services for disadvantaged children. 

 

http://www.wearelumos.org/news/1391
 

International Family Services, Inc.'s Accreditation Suspended

International Family Services, Inc.'s Accreditation Suspended

July 3, 2014

On July 3, 2014, the Council on Accreditation (COA), the Department of State’s designated Accrediting Entity for adoption service providers under the Hague Adoption Convention (Convention) and Intercountry Adoption Act of 2000, suspended the accreditation of International Family Services, Inc. to provide adoption services in Convention adoption cases for failing to maintain substantial compliance with the accreditation standards at 22 Code of Federal Regulations Part 96 Subpart F. For more information regarding this suspension please refer to information on substantiated complaints and adverse actions on the Council on Accreditation’s website.

As a result of this suspension, International Family Services, Inc. must cease to provide all adoption services in connection with cases covered under the Convention. Please note that beginning July14, 2014, this suspension will also affect International Family Services, Inc.’s ability to provide adoption services in non-Convention countries in cases subject to the Intercountry Adoption Universal Accreditation Act (UAA). This adoption service provider has provided adoption services in Bulgaria, China, Ethiopia, India, Moldova, Serbia, and Ukraine. Persons with an open case with International Family Services, Inc. should contact the adoption service provider directly to find out how the suspension will affect their adoption services.

The suspension will begin on July 3, 2014, and will last for at least 30 days. In order for the suspension to be lifted at the end of the 30 days, International Family Services, Inc. must complete corrective action required by the accrediting entity. Updated information will be provided on the adoption.state.gov website.

From Calcutta's gutters to Collingwood: Local woman saved by Mother Teresa publishes her story

Sara Denbok is a happy wife and mother living in Collingwood, and every year she celebrates her birthday given to her by Mother Teresa.

Sara didn't come with a birthday, or anything, when she arrived at Nirmala Shishu Bhavan (Mother Teresa's orphanage in Calcutta). She knew only that her name was Bindu (water drop).

Sara was rescued by a police officer from the gutter, filthy and wounded, perhaps by wild dogs, in Calcutta, India in 1972. She was about three years old, but there was no way to know.

Sara doesn't remember anything from her life before the age of seven. Though the orphanage put up posters to find her birth parents, nobody came forward to claim the toddler.

"Though Mother Teresa was, to many people, simply a woman to be admired, to me she is much more," said Denbok. "For if it was not for her, I would probably not be alive today."

Ending child institutionalisation in Europe

Ending child institutionalisation in Europe

inShare

Published: 01/07/2014 - 08:29

The EU has spent hundreds of millions of euros aimed at improving the lives of children in programmes that ended up locking them up in dysfunctional state institutions, writes Georgette Mulheir.

Georgette Mulheir is the Chief Executive Officer of Lumos, a foundation which helps prevent abandonment of children and babies.

Holt's 2014 Heritage Tour of India; A Recap

Holt's 2014 Heritage Tour of India; A Recap

1

Dean Hale, director of programs in India, reflects on Holt’s first heritage tour of India.

Our inaugural heritage tour of India went off well! We had four adoptees on this tour, all of whom traveled with family members. All the adoptees visited the orphanage where they lived in India and met staff members who remembered them.

The India tour group in front of the Taj Mahal. “This iconic wonder of the world is up to the reputation, and a testament for a man’s love in honor of his late wife,” says Dean.

Analysis: Denmark should adopt children from fewer countries

Analysis: Denmark should adopt children from fewer countries

By Lisbeth Quass, Berlingske News

27 June 2014 01:12

Need to cut down on the number of countries that adopt children from Denmark, is the recommendation of an analysis by the Ministry of Social Affairs.

Denmark will in future adopt children from fewer countries. This is the recommendation of an analysis of the adoption system from the Ministry of Social Affairs, writes Politiken.

Gender Ministry to centralise child adoption (SUSPENSION)

Gender Ministry to centralise child adoption

June 24, 2014 | Filed under: Latest news | Posted by: VibeGhana

The Ministry of Gender, Children and Social Protection (MoGCSP) has suspended child adoption to enable it to deal with challenges associated with the adoption process in the country.

The initiative is also to protect adopted children and their foster parents.

In view of that, the Ministry has commenced a review of the adoption processes to establish a Central Adoption Authority in line with mandated international regulation and obligations.