Home  

Adoptive mother stranded in Uganda

Adoptive mother stranded in Uganda

by OWEN LEI / KING 5 News

NWCN.com

Child trafficking bill passes Senate to become law

Child trafficking bill passes Senate to become law

 

 

 
 
 

OTTAWA — The Senate has adopted a Conservative backbench MP's bill to ensure traffickers of children in Canada spend at least five years in jail, removing its final hurdle in becoming law.

 

The bill puts in place mandatory minimum sentences for people convicted of trafficking children in Canada, with at least five years for most offences and six years for offences involving aggravated circumstances, such as sexual assault.

 

The current law imposes a maximum penalty of 14 years for human trafficking, regardless of the victim's age, but there is no minimum. Human trafficking has been an offence in Canada for less than five years.

 

Manitoba MP Joy Smith's private member's bill passed in the House of Commons last September, with the support of the Conservatives and most Liberal and NDP MPs. The Bloc Quebecois voted against the bill.

 

Smith says the bill is needed because the first few convictions under the law resulted in lenient sentences.

 

But the debate in the Senate has been slow, and it has sat in the upper chamber for nearly nine months. It received third reading Thursday, and is due to receive royal assent and be proclaimed law.

 

"Bill C-268 is an important step forward in addressing human trafficking here in Canada," Smith said in a statement. "Traffickers need to know that Canada will not accept the exploitation and sale of our children and any attempts to do so will be met with stiff consequences."

 

Smith said the bill is the only private member's bill to be passed by Parliament since the most recent election in 2008. Its passing is "even more significant" since it amends the Criminal Code, she said. Prior to this legislation, only 14 private member's bills containing Criminal Code amendments have been adopted by Parliament since Confederation.

International briefs: Russia says adoption deal OK'd

International briefs: Russia says adoption deal OK'd

Posted Thursday, Jun. 17, 2010
Russia says adoption deal OK'd

RUSSIA -- A Russian rights ombudsman said Thursday that Russian and U.S. negotiators have agreed to set up licensed adoption agencies and allow monitors to visit the homes of adopted children as part of a new accord, but the State Department said no deal had been reached. State Department spokesman Mark Toner said the Moscow talks will be extended. New adoptions of Russians by U.S. parents virtually stopped after an incident in April in which a Tennessee adoptive mother put a 7-year-old boy on a plane back to Russia unaccompanied by an adult.

http://www.star-telegram.com/2010/06/17/2274520/international-briefs-russia-says.html

 

De facto statelessness places adoption on the table for children of N.Korean women in China

De facto statelessness places adoption on the table for children of N.Korean women in China
Proponents say adoption is one solution to complex legal and social issues, while critics say it bypasses resolving root causes and is not in the child’s best interests
 
 
 
-->
 
» North Korean child defectors in China, 2001.
 
In an effort to address legal obstacles faced by children of North Korean mothers in China, the U.S. House of Representatives introduced a bill proposing a solution on March 25 of this year. The bill, H.R. 4986, is also known as the “North Korean Refugee Adoption Act of 2010.”

 

The bill’s purpose is “to develop a strategy for assisting stateless children from North Korea, and for other purposes.” The same bill, S.3156, was also introduced into the U.S. Senate two days prior.

 

The bill has been backed by Liberty in North Korea (LiNK), an NGO that works with North Korean defectors. LiNK worked with legislators during the drafting process. The NGO has also campaigned for the bill by screening a film at campuses, community centers, and churches across the United States, according to LiNK President Hannah Song.

 

H.R. 4986 proposes inter-country adoption as a solution to resolve issues surrounding children of North Korean women living in China and recommends that the U.S. Secretary of State “develop a comprehensive strategy for facilitating the adoption of North Korean children by United States citizens.”

 


This bill also states that it would seek ways to establish pilot programs in South Korea, China, Southeast Asia, and other countries for identification, immediate care, and eventual international adoption of orphaned children from North Korea. It attempts to create alternative mechanisms for foreign-sending countries to prove that North Korean children are orphans when documentation, such as birth certificates, death certificates of birth parents, or orphanage documentation, is missing or destroyed.

 

Such documentation is a requirement of the Hague Convention on Protection of Children and Co-operation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption, which sets out international principles that govern inter-country adoption. The Hague Convention, of which China is a signatory, “seeks to ensure that intercountry adoptions are made in the best interests of the child and with respect for his or her fundamental rights, and to prevent the abduction, the sale of, or traffic in children.”

 

“The tough challenge with North Korea and even with what we saw with Haiti, for example, was that documentation was destroyed,” said LiNK President Song. “And for North Korea, it just does not exist.”

 

De Jure vs. De Facto Statelessness

 

Children of North Korean mothers and Chinese fathers face a number of significant and diverse legal obstacles that ultimately lead to difficulties in securing citizenship in China.

 

Although they are legally entitled to Chinese citizenship, children face obstacles in obtaining hukou, a family registry certificate. Such a certificate is difficult to obtain under current practice. This is because although not required by law, the Chinese father must submit legal proof including testimonies from witnesses that his North Korean wife has been arrested and repatriated back to North Korea. This is a requirement because the mother may not be listed on the hukou due to her status as an illegal economic migrant, since China currently does not recognize North Korean border crossers as refugees. As a result, families are caught between having to leave children in de facto statelessness, as they cannot obtain hukou, or having to split up the family, both of which could become root causes for abandonment and eventual stateless orphan status.

 

“Many North Korean children of Chinese fathers and North Korean mothers live in legal limbo,” said Kay Seok of international NGO Human Rights Watch in her report, “Denied Status, Denied Education: Children of North Korean Women in China.”

 

“Children are nationals of North Korea, meaning entitled to South Korean citizenship at the same time, even if children already have dual nationality from China and North Korea,” said international human rights lawyer Kim Jong-chul. “Children are stateless not in the de jure sense, but in a de facto sense because their Chinese birth fathers do not register them under the family registration system, which prevents them from receiving educational and medical services.”

 

Inter-country Adoption

 

Inter-country adoption remains a complex issue in Northeast Asia. An estimated 200,000 children from South Korea have been sent overseas through inter-country adoption. Ninety percent of children sent abroad through inter-country adoption from South Korea in 2009 were children of unwed mothers. According to the U.S. Department of State, China sent an estimated 3,000 children to the United States in 2009.

 

Tentative Support

 

Supporters of the bill claim it will help address what they deem China’s lack of willingness to cooperate on issues pertaining to North Korean defectors, as well as a lack of resources to address related social welfare issues.

 

“Overall, I see positive intentions behind this law,” said Seok. “Orphanages are not ideal, and there is a lack of financial resources in those areas of China where children of North Korean mothers reside that are available in countries like the U.S.”

 

However, Seok notes that there are potential practical problems.

 

“If this law were to pass, first and foremost, the organizations that are a part of these measures would have to work with China, and it is not a given that China’s government will agree to cooperate,” said Seok, speaking of the bill’s challenges. “Second, they need to verify documentation about the children and their parents, which will be the most difficult task they will face.”

 

In addition to highlighting the lack of financial resources in China to address this issue, experts also consider China’s policies toward North Korean defectors.

 

“When China’s rigid or hostile attitude toward North Korean defectors is considered, inter-country adoption is one of the possible options to resolve this kind of dilemma,” said Kim Jong-chul.

 

Criticisms

 

Inter-country adoption remains controversial in circles of academia, social welfare, and human rights. In addition, the Hague Convention mandates that the first priority is in keeping families together, looking to domestic adoption as a second alternative, and inter-country adoption as a last resort.

 

The inter-country adoption program that launched in South Korea in the aftermath of the Korean War was the first of its kind.

 

“As previously hidden histories of American adoption of that generation have surfaced, they - as with subsequent generations of adoptees - were often doubly traumatized by the very humanitarian process meant to liberate them from poverty and suffering,” said Christine Hong, professor of Critical Pacific Rim Studies and Korean Diaspora Studies at UC Santa Cruz in the United States in regards to the inter-country adoption program.

 

“Who has the authority to determine if these children have indeed been socially orphaned and surrendered for adoption?” asked Hong. “This resolution does not begin to address these fundamental questions that any ethical overseas adoption program must address.”

 

Others have pointed to the need to address root causes of the issue.

 

“Public policies have to include a way to overcome this emergency situation and a means to normalize or legalize the family situation of Chinese men and North Korean refugee women,” said Reverend Kim Do Hyun of Koroot, a group that provides support for inter-country adoptees from South Korea.

 

 
» The bill, H.R. 4986, is also known as the “North Korean Refugee Adoption Act of 2010.
 

 

Alternative Legal Avenues

 

The legal complexity woven around the children of North Korean mothers in China remains a stark reality. Indeed, the issue has permeated into legal systems in China, South Korea, North Korea, a number of countries in Southeast Asia in which defectors reside, and the United States, among others.

 

In its report, Human Rights Watch recommends not inter-country adoption, but that the Chinese government “allow hukou registration for all children with one Chinese parent without requiring verification of the identity of the other parent,” among its suggestions.

 

“The problem is not the absence of a law in China,” said Kay Seok, who is also a supporter of the bill. “The issue is the enforcement of the law, which should take place without penalizing the children’s parents.”

 

In addition, Kim Jong-chul, also a bill supporter, said in regards to the will to first seek to obtain hukou, “In reality, Chinese fathers are very reluctant to register their children because the one-child policy and their North Korean wife’s illegal status are obstacles.”

 

The Protection and Settlement for North Korean Defectors Act passed by South Korea’s National Assembly 2007 is the legal mechanism through which North Koreans who have left the country may gain lawful recognition as South Korean nationals. It is based on a South Korean constitutional provision that defines the Republic of Korea as the entire Korean peninsula, meaning that people from North Korea are eligible for lawful recognition in South Korea.

 

The language of the North Korean Defectors Act implies that only those who previously held North Korean citizenship are eligible. Legal experts say that a clarification upon or amendment to the law’s definition of North Korean defectors could grant children, along with their mothers, recognition as South Korean nationals. This may effectively be an alternative solution to the de facto statelessness of the children.

 

The language of H.R. 4986 also makes it unclear as to which children fall within the scope of the programs that may be created under the bill. The bill states that the children that will benefit from inter-country adoption are orphaned North Korean children who do not have families or permanent residence, as well as orphans with Chinese fathers and North Korean mothers living in China and any eligible North Korean children. Such language leaves ambiguity as to which children the bill refers to, and therefore, which children may be determined “eligible” for inter-country adoption through a newly-created documentation process.

 

“We would never take a child who we know has a parent that is still alive and pretty much put them through this process for adoption,” said LiNK’s President Song, who later added that she also supports directly contacting parents to confirm relinquishment of children. The current language of the bill, however, does not clearly articulate those sentiments.

 

The bill has been referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs according to U.S. legislative procedure and is likely to go through a number of stages of discussion, markup and further amendments prior to being finalized and presented for a vote by the Congress.

 

By Kimberly Hyo-Jung Campbell

 

Please direct questions or comments to [englishhani@hani.co.kr]

 


http://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_national/426317.html

 

Blog: US trainees in New Life Home (Kenya)

See: DATABASE ACCESS TO AMANI

Friday, June 18, 2010

in Nairobi_ day 2

Today was great! We went to the Home at 9 and divided into 3 groups, the toddlers, crawlers, and babies. I was with the toddlers again, and knowing each of their names and a little of their personalities it was fun to play. They particularly enjoyed the slide this morning!
We fed them "momo" (snack) today of bananas and mangos. And then washed them and put them down for a nap. Their nap time is our lunch time.

After we came back and had a meeting with Rhoda, who is the New Life Home's Social Worker. She went through the adoption process again and filled in the blanks from orientation weekend. Basically the same info but more practicality now that we know the Home and kids. There are local adoptions and international adoptions. The locals are able to come and volunteer and pick out a kid. The Internationals come knowing which one they will take home. The international parents fill out an application and request a gender and age group. New Life then sends them adoption files of all the kids fitting these ranges. This is a fairly new law, less than a year old, so there are still a lot of thinks still to be worked out. And our work will also help with this process. The work we do will also help the babies get adopted faster.

Each baby has to be brought to court with his or her adoption files and argued that they are ready for adoption. The Kenyan Adoption Board decides yes or no, if no they say what else needs to be done. This process can take a week, a month, or a year. There's a lady who visits her soon to be son every day, but she has been in the process for the past 2 years. Effciency is crucial since New Life is almost always at bed capacity. The faster the turn over the more kids can come. When New Life has to turn away kids, they're sent to other orphanages. But New Life (I hope I don't offend anyone here who has worked with other Kenya Homes) but New Life is seen as the standard in the eyes of the government and very well respected among the people. They do things right, everything from medical care to good schooling and lots of love. But other orphanages have had problems and sketchy situations where they will secretly sell babies for not good reasons. So we want our records straight, clean, clear, and accessible so no bad accusations can be made against New Life.

Tonight and this weekend we will be talking about how to exactly right up these adoption files. Drew Rothenberg will be talking about how we should be filling out the Psyco-Social Reports and I'll be talking about the basic techniques for photographs such as the rule of thirds and when and when not to use a flash.

After the meeting with Rhoda we talked a little about what we'd be doing in the future. Each home will have a scanner and we'll scan the hard copies of police reports and medical reports and so on. On top of these scans, the psycho-social reports, and our photographs, we will be putting each child's report on an online password protected data base that can be accessed from any of the Kenya New Life homes and Amani in the US.

So basically the people here are amazing. I don't know how they get everything done without all the volunteers they have! Cooking, cleaning, laundry, yard-work, bathing, and playing with the kids is a ton of work! But here in Nairobi there are several volunteers from the University who have to meet service hour requirements. We talked to a few regular and local volunteers who have graduated but can't find jobs. They continued to explain, that of course when a Kenyan can't find work they give back to their community. Dang, like just imagine what the world would be like if everyone had that perspective on life.

My team is fantastic. A few of us make dinners together. Last night we made rice, curry spinach with walnuts. And tonight we made rice (for me) and pasta with tomato sauce eggs and broccoli. Since we haven't started the reports yet, we spend our free time playing cards, watching world cup, reading, napping, and talking about everything :) this is the way to live; in community, sharing everything, giving, and learning and growing together <3

I already want to stay for a few more weeks… hehe

Film wise I got interviews set up and basic questions written out. We'll be able to start shooting and photographing on Tuesday!

 

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

in Nairobi_ day 7
Off to New Life Home again! We continued with our psyco-social observations and reports. We have almost finished all the crawlers! So far we about 20 uploaded into our online archives. These case summaries, psyco-social reports, and pictures will be sent to international and local families looking to adopt and they will go towards arguing before the Kenyan Adoption Board who determines whether the baby is free to go with the families.

In the morning, I met with Rhoda and interviewed her in her office. I asked questions like "what is your role here at new life," "what are the biggest challenges you face as a social worker," "briefly explain the adoption process from new life's point of view," "how is new life different from other orphanages in kenya," "what do you hope to gain from us 11 interns working here and at various other homes"
She was very informative and answered the questions really well! The interview will be very helpful when putting together the doc.


I also was recruited to help write case study summaries but I had to decline because we had to hand write them, and my handwriting = chicken scratch and very illegible. But what the others who had pretty had writing did was take a baby's folder full of stuff (police reports, baby foot prints, birthday cards, legal papers, court committals, good Samaritans letters, and anything relevant to the child) and they summarized everything into case summaries… all on notebook paper. So that's partly why we're here. Because we are putting everything into accessible and electronic files. This way upon request, parents can view appropriate files (copy and paste are wonderful) and they can be easily printed out for case/adoption files.

In the afternoon we headed over to Little Angles with Rhoda. This is the adoption agency that is partnered with New Life Homes. They are the ones who receive adoption requests and applications and deal with the legal processes. They screen and interview parents and do the home visits to check up on the kids during the 3 month foster period once the babies are cleared for adoption. I also filmed this, and it was super duper cool to hear the process first hand from the baby lawyers and other social workers.

After walking home, we stopped by Yaya (our grocery store) to pick up last minute groceries before we start traveling on Sunday… because tomorrow we will be going on a Safari!!!!! Hooray!!! We leave tomorrow and come back Saturday night so I won't post again till then. I'm so pumped to see National Geographic and Discovery Channel and Animal Planet in real life! We get to hang out with the Maasai people (google them, their sweet!) and see all the typical animals. More details when I return :)

It's been incredible to get to know the adoption process.. . New Life averages about 1 kid per week being 'identified' which means a family has expressed interest which is sweet. But what will be sweeter is that with our work parents will be able to get their babies sooner.

Before we came here, at orientation , we watched this documentary following several adults trying to find out birth records and any family history they have. It really put into perspective that without these files in order, the New Life babies and babies in homes all over the world don't have a connection to their roots, history, or a feeling of completion with their story. These babies have rights, a right to know their family medical history, where they were born, their original/given name, parents info, a birth certificate, and why they ended up where they did. Every time work gets a little slow or monotonous, its encouraging to know that I'm fighting for someone who can't but who will later find these files priceless.

Well, its off to bed for me! I gotta back up and upload photos and videos. I'm all packed for the safari and camping. I'm going to the Lenovo store tomorrow with another intern who's school computer is broken. Since this is kind of a heavy on the technology job, computers are crucial. --> what was the one thing I forgot on this trip… my computer charger. But thank goodness several other people on the trip have school computers!!!!


Ok so also, all 11 of us were in one apartment living room watching the world cup and went absolutely nutz when USA scored. If the rest of the Kenyan complex was wondering if we were american, they know now!

I have so much great footage, I can't wait to start going through it. I filmed some more babies at New Life today, and interviewed some of the other interns. I love film!!!!! Here are some pictures too :)

Dutch moves court to trace Indian roots

Dutch moves court to trace Indian roots
 
 
 
A 34-year-old Dutch national has approached the Bombay High Court for help in locating her roots in India, alleging that she was probably kidnapped as an infant and given up for international adoption.
Daksha Van Dijck, a clinical psychologist who worked as a scientist at Maastricht University, has filed a petition saying she suspected she was kidnapped in 1975 and given up for adoption by Shraddhanand Mahilashram in Matunga.
A division bench on Tuesday directed the state to file a reply in two weeks. Dijck was adopted by Johan Van Dijck in 1975 through Wereldkinderen, an adoption agency in Hague.
After her first visit to India in 2001, Dijck tried locating her biological parents through Wereldkinderen. She returned to India in 2007 with her husband and approached Shraddhanand Mahilashram. "The office bearers were totally uncooperative in furnishing any details about her [Dijck] adoption and her biological parent/parents," her petition alleges.
Dijck then approached Wereldkinderen, which allowed her to see her file. The file, however, did not have details about her biological parents or any declaration that she had been abandoned, the petition says.
Pradeep Havnur, Dijck's advocate, said Wereldkinderen had registered complaint with the Matunga police on February 2, 2009 because Shraddhanand Mahilashram was not cooperating.
Rakesh Kapoor, advocate for Shraddhanand Mahilashram, said, "Those days, there was no system to get authentic information of the parent who was relinquishing a child. We have no reason to hide anything from her but she is chasing something that does not exist."
Dijck's petition requests the court to direct the police or the Criminal Investigation Department or Central Bureau of Investigation to investigate Wereldkinderen's 2009 complaint.
 

Pune Preet Mandir's licence suspended

Pune Preet Mandir's licence suspended
 
Sakaal Times
Friday, June 18, 2010 AT 11:17 PM (IST)
Tags: Pune Preet Mandir,   Orphanage,   Children,   Central Adoption Resources Agency
PUNE: Bajirao Jadhav, commissioner for Women and Child Development, under the ministry of Women and Child Welfare Department, today ordered temporary closure of Pune Preet Mandir for their alleged link to a number of adoption-related controversies over the past few years.
 
The committee has started the process of shifting the 74 children, housed at the centre to various government-recognised children's home in the city till the the Bombay High court gives a verdict on the alleged irregularities in the adoption procedures at the agency. The children will be staying at the various orphanages run by the government till the case is resolved.
 
The controversies, which have reached the Bombay High Court, are being probed by the CBI.
 
Jadhav told UNI that the licence has been temporarily suspended to safeguard the 74 children's interests. ''As it is, the Central Adoption Resources Agency (CARA) has disallowed overseas adoption of children from the agency, judicial procedures take time and the children must be looked after till then,'' he said.
 
Child Welfare committee member Anita Vipat said, ''The Committee, as per the provisions of the Juvenile Justice Act, is transferring the children to various homes, depending upon their age group and medical status. The agency has children up to 12 years, most of them between the age group of 0 and 6 years.'' The Preet Mandir agency has been facing charges of trading in children overseas by misleading adopters and Central Bureau of Investigation is still investigating the case, she said.
 
The Bombay High Court had directed additional solicitor general D J Khambata to seek instruction from Central Adoption Resources Agency (CARA), and Union Ministry for Women and child welfare to cooperate with the CBI on Wednesday last. The most recent controversy involved sale of an HIV-positive boy, who later died, by the Gurukul Godavari Balak Ashram in Yerawada to a Mumbai couple and police arrested the ashram head and a Preet Mandir official.
 
Meanwhile, children from Preet Mandir were shifted to the Bharatiya Samaj Seva Kendra and three others orphanages. 
 
 

 

Bill allowing adoption by single women in next session

Bill allowing adoption by single women in next session
Special Correspondent
Share  ·   print  ·   T+   T+  ·   T-

THE HINDU A file photo of Jayanthi Natarajan. Photo: K. Pichumani
Related
NEWS
Nod for amendments to Central Educational Institutions Act CEO Forum pushes for Foreign Universities Bill
TOPICS
Tamil Nadu Chennai
crime, law and justice laws
family parent and child
social issue social issues (general)
The Bill seeking to amend the Guardians and Wards Act, 1890 and the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act 1956 to pave the way for adoption by widows and single women will be passed in the coming session of Parliament, said Jayanthi Natarajan, Chairperson of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Personnel, Public Grievances, Law and Justice. The Personal Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2010, was introduced in Rajya Sabha on April, 22, 2010 and referred to the standing committee for eliciting public opinion on the issue.
Talking to reporters after holding discussions with officials of the State government and various Public Sector Undertakings (PSUs), Ms. Natarajan said there was unanimous opinion in favour of the Bill. The committee had already visited Mumbai and Bangalore.
Ms. Natarajan said the issue of adopting a “flexible policy,” with regard to promotion, leave and vacation for women in government jobs, was also discussed.
“Many women refuse to accept promotional transfers citing family responsibility. The committee has suggested that the PSUs and other government agencies could formulate a flexible promotion and transfer policy for women employees.”
While discussing the issue of sexual harassment of women in the workplace, the committee evaluated whether the guidelines set up by the Supreme Court in Vishaka case were being followed. She said the Centre was considering enacting a law in this regard and the private sector could be covered at a later stage.
The meeting on Saturday also discussed in detail the infrastructure facilities, appointments in subordinate courts and the possibility of courts functioning in shifts, re-employment of retired judges and setting up fast-track courts for speedy disposal of cases with regard to rape, sexual harassment and cases involving senior citizens.
Ms. Natarajan said the situation in Tamil Nadu was better in terms of infrastructure. Vacancies were filled immediately and judges were given training periodically.
She said no representation was made to the committee in connection with making Tamil a court language.
Keywords: child adoption, Hindu Maintenance Act, Hindu Guardian and Wards Act

List of Adopted Child (From 2009 to date)

Source: http://www.mowcsw.gov.np/opensection.php?secid=484


Date june 2, 2010

List of Adopted Child (From 2009 to date)


S.N Country No. of  Child Adopted
1 Canada 2
2 France 9
3 Italy 26
4 Norway 1
5 Sweden 3
6 UK 1
7 USA 27
Total 73


 

Big money to be made in the adoption trade

Big money to be made in the adoption trade
If ever there was a scandal which called for the full glare of publicity it is the highly secretive system which allows thousands of children to be sent for forced adoption, writes Christopher Booker. 
 

By Christopher Booker
Published: 6:32PM BST 19 Jun 2010
Comments

Sir Bob Geldof who has attacked the UK?s 'state-sanctioned kidnap'
On June 3, a 17-year-old Staffordshire girl, living with her parents and seven months pregnant, was horrified to receive a letter which began: “Dear Corrinne, I am the new allocated social worker for your unborn child. We have serious concerns about your ability to care for your unborn baby. We are so worried that we intend on going to Court to apply for an Order that will allow us to place your baby with alternative carers.” This so shocked the family that they raised what money they could and, like many others faced with similar threats, escaped abroad, where they now live in circumstances hardly conducive to a happy delivery of their new child.
Staffordshire social workers were also involved in the tragic case of Maureen Smith, the mother so desperate at the prospect of losing her two children that she fled to Spain, where she killed them before attempting suicide. As she wrote in her suicide note: “Social Services In Staffordshire and their policy of forced adoption are responsible for this.”
 
Related Articles
·         David Cameron learns who's in charge
·         Being green will not get us out of the red
These are just two instances of the vast, long-running tragedy which Bob Geldof, launching a report last December on the “barbaric” chaos of our family law system, called “state-sanctioned kidnap”, whereby social workers, abetted by family courts and an army of complicit lawyers and “experts”, routinely snatch children from loving parents to feed the maw of the adoption and fostering industry.
Yet contrast this with last week’s report exonerating Kirklees social workers from any failings in the case of Shannon Matthews, the Yorkshire girl made subject, after years of neglect and ill-treatment, to a fake kidnap by her mother (described by local police as “pure evil”). Even though no fewer than 22 agencies had been involved with this dysfunctional family over many years, the report found that Shannon’s treatment did not justify taking her into care.
If ever there was a scandal which called for the full glare of publicity it is the highly secretive system which allows thousands of children to be sent for forced adoption, often on no proper pretext. Meanwhile the list of cases where social workers ignore all evidence in allowing the abuse of children to continue, grows ever longer.
It is not generally appreciated how adoption and fostering, organised by social workers, have become big business – quite apart from the fees charged by those lawyers and experts who are part of this corrupt system. Adoption payments and access to a wide range of benefits can provide carers with hundreds, even thousands of pounds a week. Still to be found on the internet (see the Forced Adoption website) is an advertisement by Slough Family Placement Services headed “Balloons and family fun to promote fostering”. This promised that Slough’s town square would be “bustling with activities including face painting and balloon modelling”, complete with a “David Beckham lookalike” (“bring a camera”), to launch “a new fostering allowance of £400 a week”.
I have recently reported the harassment and repeated arrests of Mauren Spalek, the devoted Cheshire mother whose two younger children were taken from her in 2006, and who faces trial on June 29 on a criminal charge of sending her son a birthday card. Last week it emerged, from an official register, what the occupation is of the woman who adopted her stolen children. She is a social worker.