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Do adoptees have special CPR numbers?

Foreign adoptees always have a social security number with a relatively high serial number, but you cannot determine from the serial number whether the child is adopted. However, special conditions apply to foreign adoptees who came to Denmark between 1976 and 1984.

For adoptees who arrived in Denmark in 2001 or later, many have been surprised that the child has been given a very high serial number, but there is a natural explanation for this.

A CPR number consists of 10 digits: ddmmåå xyzw

ddmmyy is the date of birth, 6 digits.

xyz is a 3-digit serial number, 3 digits

Marie Ange: The globe trotting filmmaker

Culture


Marie Ange: The globe trotting filmmaker


Haitian filmmaker Marie Ange Sylvain-Holmgren's home in Gulshan is a virtual treasure trove of artifacts. As soon as one enters, one is greeted by her photograph of Buddhist monks in Laos. There's more--ornaments such as bead necklaces of the Masai women from Kenya, a Pali book from Myanmar, betel boxes from Myanmar and old Ethiopian jewellery fashioned from bronze. Adorning the walls are paintings of Ranjit Das and Srabon. In one corner is a piano which she has been playing for 30 years.

All this and more is testimony to Marie Ange's globetrotting existence which has taken her through countries such as USA, UK, France, Mexico, Ecuador, Zaire, Algeria, Senegal, Kenya, Nepal, Vietnam, Thailand, Myanmar and Laos.

Since 2002 she has been in Bangladesh, working as a film director with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and basically produces documentaries on social issues, especially those related to UNDP's projects. Among her latest works is a film on the Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT), titled Amar Desh. This work narrates the story of the tribal communities and their non-tribal neighbours in the CHT. As Marie Ange says, "The most important objective of the UNDP project is to build the self-confidence of the ethnic communities and develop these areas."

Marie Ange is also doing an independent documentary on Indian classical vocalist Kalpana Bhattacharya. The latter is based in Kolkata and is currently in Dhaka. Marie Ange is effusive in her praise for Kalpana. As she says, " She sings raga in the dhrupad style. Raga is not merely an auditory experience but also an emotional one for her."

In all likelihood, Marie Ange will call the film Kalpana. The shooting is over and she is now beginning the editing process, which will take a month. The film is in Bangla with English subtitles.

Marie Ange is also learning to play the sitar. Her guru is Ustad Alim Khan. She took to this musical instrument in November last year. In her words, "I opted for the sitar because it is through this music that I developed an interest in Indian classical music. This music speaks to me and I become so overwhelmed with emotion that I cry sometimes."

What about the language barrier? The articulate Marie Ange is unfazed: "There is nothing to understand. The words are not important, it is the rhythm and tunes that count. There are notes and musical forms which I have never heard before and which touch my heart," she says.

For Marie Ange, Bangladesh is an eye-opener. "I have never been in a country where everything is a subject. You go out in the streets and there are subjects, everywhere you turn. Even the garbage lady is a subject for films and photography. I would call Bangladesh a university of life; I have never seen a country where you have so many issues all together, like environment, the refugee situation, poverty, ethnic conflict, education and gender issues.

I know many foreigners complain about everyday life in Bangladesh but I find it amazingly interesting and I learn so much."

What's in store for the intrepid Marie Ange? Continuing to find subjects and devote time to the sitar. In the meantime Bangladesh and Marie Ange have a symbiotic relationship.

Annual report 2005 + 2006 - Gamini Wijewardena

3.5 Sri Lanka

Binnen het bestuur was reeds eind 2004 de discussie

opgestart of we wel verder willen gaan met de toenmalige

contactpersoon. Dit omdat wij van mening waren dat het

aantal adopties achterbleef bij onze verwachtingen. Tijdens

The Two Faces of Intercountry Adoption: The Significance of the Indian Adoption Scandals

1. The CRC and Intercountry Adoption The CRC appears to take a very limited view of when intercountry adoption is appropriate. The critical text requires that state parties “[r]ecognize that inter-country adoption may be considered as an alternative means of child’s care, if the child cannot be placed in a foster or an adoptive family or cannot in any suitable manner be cared for in the child’s country of origin.”

The CRC’s preference for in-country over intercountry adoption is compatible with the Hague Convention. However, the CRC also specifically prefers in-country foster care over intercountry adoption, and initially appears to favor in-country institutional care over intercountry adoption. These latter positions are more controversial, and appear to conflict with the Hague Convention.

It is notable, in this regard, that the United Nations Children’s Fund (“UNICEF”) recently issued a public position on intercountry adoption which appears to favor intercountry adoption over incountry institutional care.24 The statement cites both the CRC and the Hague Convention with approval. In regard to institutional care, however, UNICEF states: For children who cannot be raised by their own families, an appropriate alternative family environment should be sought in preference to institutional care, which should be used only as a last resort and as a temporary measure. Inter-country adoption is one of a range of care options which may be open to children, and for individual children who cannot be placed in a permanent family setting in their countries of origin, it may indeed be the best solution. In each case, the best interests of the individual child must be the guiding principle in making a decision regarding adoption. 

One could argue that, under the language of the CRC, institutional care is not a “suitable manner” for the permanent care of a child. Therefore, a plausible interpretation of the CRC is that it prefers intercountry adoption to in-country institutional care. By such interpretations, the international community is apparently working toward a harmonization of apparent conflicts between the CRC and the Hague Convention.

Hands of Mercy Christian Outreach to build Orphanage

Hands of Mercy Christian Outreach to build Orphanage

Source: GNA - Ghana News AgencyRegional News | Sat, 28 May 2005 ArticleHeadlines(0) Comment | Share | Print | E-mail | Save | Alerts If God's compassion or grace doesn't have an end,then,there is no hell. By: Kyei-Afrifa Mannhei

Accra, May 28, GNA - An Orphanage estimated at about 90 million dollars is to be constructed near Madina in Accra by the Hands of Mercy Christian Outreach Ministry.

Mr Paul Anaba, Africa Liaison Chairman of the Board of the Ghana Division of Outreach, disclosed this to the Ghana News Agency in Accra, on Saturday.

He said land had been acquired for the project, adding that, the Director of the Outreach, which is an international Ministry based in Canada, the Reverend Deborah Macquarrie, was expected in Ghana by the end of the year to perform the ground breaking ceremony. Mr Anaba who is also Home Administrator said that in a modest way, the Outreach had started a Home at Teshie Tsui-bleoo with nine orphans in rented premises.

The unearthing of an international child trafficking racket that brazenly thrived under the guise of adoption

Article contains pic of Satish, Sabeen etc. http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/international-child-trafficking-racket-busted-in-tamil-nadu/1/193692.html

 

Babies With Price Tags The unearthing of an international child trafficking racket that brazenly thrived under the guise of an adoption agency shows how pockets of poverty in the state are a haven for baby hunters

May 23, 2005 | Arun Ram

Koteeswaran means "millionaire" in Tamil and when autorickshaw driver Gokulakrishnan and his wife Geetha of Chennai named their son so, they may have hoped to alleviate the misery of their poverty- ridden lives. But the misery was compounded when on January 5, 2000, the two-year-old boy went missing from their Thousand Lights home. Last week, however, he was found again a few kilometres away in T. Nagar, staying with his adopted parents after the Chennai Police unearthed a racket run by an adoption agency that sold kidnapped children like Koteeswaran.

The shocking tale of a flourishing trade in child trafficking unfolded on May 3 when the police arrested a bootlegger, Sheikh Mohammed. On interrogation he revealed that he and his brother-in- law were also involved in "arranging" for children to be sent abroad. Several more arrests led the police to Manoharan who was the conduit between the kidnappers and Malaysia Social Service Centre (MSSC), the adoption agency.

The Central Crime Branch (CCB) then took over the investigation. With the arrest of P. Ravindranath, who ran MSSC, his wife Vatsala and son Dinesh Kumar, it came to light that between 1991 and 2002 the agency had sent at least 125 children to various countries, including Australia, Finland and the Netherlands. Flouting the extremely stringent adoptionrules in India and abroad, the agency had indulged in forgery, falsification of documents and, above all, abetting of kidnapping. "Certificates of the Juvenile Welfare Board, Social Defence Department and Social Welfare Department appear to be forged. The racketeers obviously had connections in high places," says a police officer. "It operated at various levels and included gangs for kidnapping, forgery and mobilisation of funds from abroad." A school, a children's home and a creche, which Ravindranath claims to have been running, may have been sources for foreign funds.

While the financial details are being probed, what is appalling is that MSSC was given a clean chit in 2000 by none other than the Tamil Nadu Police. The Indian Council for Child Welfare (ICCW), one of the scrutinising agencies for adoption-related applications, had submitted a report on serious lapses in the functioning of the MSSC to the Madras High Court, which then suggested a police probe. But the police had failed to find anything then. Also MSSC did not renew its licence in 2002 after 11 years of functioning.

Now as the CCB tries to trace the 325 children who went missing in recent years, CCB Assistant Commissioner and investigating officer Augustine Daniel says the actual number ofchildren sold by Ravindranath could be much higher. From the albums at MSSC, sevenchildren who went missing since 1991 were found to be adopted by families in different countries. It appears that MSSC's prime source of children were the kidnapping gangs. Two of the accused-Sabeera and Noujut-were allegedly the main kidnappers. Each child fetched them Rs 10,000, of which Manoharan pocketed Rs 1,000. While Ravindranath says he got $1,000 (Rs 43,000) for every child sent abroad, the police suspect the amount to be as high as $50,000 per child.

"The most vulnerable were children who slept on pavements," says Daniel. "When the parents slept, the kidnappers would pick up children aged under two-and-a-half years." In fact Gokulakrishnan and Geetha were alerted when they saw the photo of Sabeera in the newspapers and recalled her as a frequent visitor to the locality. The couple now face legal hassles before they can claim their son.

The case is also set to take an interesting turn. One of the parents, M. Dekla, a fisherwoman from Kotapalli village in Tirunelveli, has complained that MSSC had taken two of her childrenin 1998 to Germany "to provide education", but refused to give any details of them for the past five years. The children, Miguel and Melissa, now 15 and 14 years old, have reportedly been adopted by a German couple. Police sources say that besides kidnapping, the gang may have "bought" children from poor families. Parents like Dekla were offered Rs 1,000 a month for a few months.

While this is the first such international racket to be unearthed in Tamil Nadu, child traffickingacross state borders is rampant. Police and NGOs confide that a number of scams works overtime in the poverty-stricken pockets of Villupuram, Theni, Kambam, Madurai, Thenkasi and Chennai. Hundreds of children are taken by agents to Kerala to be employed as domestic helps. Their parents are offered a few thousand rupees in the first few months after which payment is stopped. Worse is the plight of children in the 10-14 age group who are taken to Maharashtra and Gujarat to be employed under excruciating conditions in sweet-making units.

NGOs blame the police for not taking the cases of missing children seriously. Says C. Nambi, convener of the NGO Campaign Against Child Trafficking: "After putting up an advertisement about the missing child, the police don't follow up the case. In this case one child went missing from the Thousand Lights police station limits and was given away for adoption in T. Nagar, which is under the jurisdiction of a nearby police station."

As details of the case are highlighted in the media, many parents have come flocking to the city police commissioner's office with photographs of their missing children, hoping to be reunited with them. Given the brazen way in which MSSC conducted its vicious trade and got away with it, one can only hope the investigation will this time nail the bigger fish who enabled it to thrive for over a decade.

COPYRIGHT 2008 Syndica

Comment Anke Hassel on TAZ article

ANKE HASSEL

Gast

22.05.2010, 13:56

Liebe taz,

eine kritische Berichterstattung über problematische Praktiken in der internationalen Adoptionsvermittlung ist wichtig, um diese zu unterbinden. Eine Adoption aufgrund falscher Angaben noch lebender Eltern hat tragische Folgen nicht nur für das Kind sondern auch für die aufnehmende Familie. Wenn dem Vater das Kind wirklich, wie im Artikel angedeutet, von einem Mittelsmann abgeschwatzt wurde, dann ist dies ein Skandal und widerspricht allen Grundsätzen der Adoptionsvermittlung.

Behind the facade

A recent case in Tamil Nadu shows that the existing system has allowed child trafficking to take place for years under the guise of a perfectly legal adoption process.

ASHA KRISHNAKUMAR

P.V. Ravindranath (extreme right), his son Dinesh Kumar and wife Vatsala Ravindranath, who were running the Malaysian Social Service Society, at the Police Commissionerate in Chennai on May 7. The three were remanded by the Central Crime Branch in connection with the alleged child adoption racket.

ON May 3, 2005, the Central Crime Branch of the Chennai police arrested five people for kidnapping and selling about 350 children to an adoption agency in the city. Several lost children seem to have been given in adoption to families abroad over the last decade. Ironically, the police have found all the paperwork by the adoption agency to be clear. This highlights the need to look into the existing adoption system that allows for child trafficking under the guise of a perfectly legal adoption process.

Frontline investigation and documents available with it reveal that this is not an isolated case. Bending rules, circumventing norms, and following illegal and unethical ways to "source" children and sell them to foreigners under the guise of adoption is not uncommon among some agencies in Tamil Nadu.

THE ADOPTION MARKET

ASHA KRISHNAKUMAR

A Frontline investigation lays bare a multi-billion-dollar, countrywide racket in inter-country adoption of children, run by private adoption agencies that exploit the loopholes in the rules.
A new-born female child, which was sold by her mother in Salem, in the arms of her sisters after she was restored to the family by the district administration in 2002.

THE arrest in Chennai on May 3, 2005, of five kidnappers, who have sold over 350 children to an adoption agency in the city over many years; the inquiry ordered by the Delhi government into the process of inter-country adoptions in 10 agencies in the Capital; and the recent moves in Andhra Pradesh to book

Shalini Misra