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Onderzoek naar illegale adopties rijt oude wonden open in Tuitjenhorn

Onderzoek naar illegale adopties rijt oude wonden open in Tuitjenhorn

Tientallen Nederlandse stellen adopteerden begin jaren 80 illegaal een baby uit Brazilië. Een opvallend groot deel kwam uit het dorp Tuitjenhorn. Was het een wanhoopsdaad, edele daad of misdaad?

Tonny van der Mee < 05-01-19, 10:30

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In de woonkamer hangt een foto van een gelukkig gezin. Piet en Greet Blankendaal uit Tuitjenhorn poseren met hun adoptiekinderen Marco (1980), Alex (1982) en Wilma (1983) en de kleinkinderen. Afgelopen zomer vierden ze hun vijftigjarig huwelijksjubileum.

Eindelijk steun voor geadopteerde Oostenrijkse kinderen

Marco Huiskes. Foto Ronald Hissink

Eindelijk steun voor geadopteerde Oostenrijkse kinderen

APELDOORN - Ongeveer 400 Oostenrijkse kinderen zijn in de jaren 60 en 70 door Nederlanders geadopteerd en ongeveer 100 daarvan kwamen in Apeldoorn terecht.

Redactie 31-07-16, 12:16 Laatste update: 12:46 Bron: destentor

Dat zegt Marco Huiskes (49), zelf ook uit Oostenrijk is geadopteerd als klein kind en in Apeldoorn is opgegroeid.

Netwerk: Timmermans naar Bulgarije (private plane)

Timmermans bezoekt kindertehuis Bulgarije

Honderden kijkers en bezoekers reageerden op de uitzending van afgelopen woensdag, waarin Netwerk de documentaire toonde over de wantoestanden in een Bulgaars kindertehuis. Staatssecretaris Timmermans van Europese Zaken nam afgelopen vrijdag poolshoogte in het kindertehuis. Een reportage.

Presentatie: Frank du Mosch

https://drive.google.com/open?id=1x_ILpOIdx58sIf9p23L244g9A3BB8sMY

Plane: PH-MEX

Politico: BOMBSHELL EMAIL

GOOD MORNING. Now, walking out in style is an art in itself. Before we get to other news, we’ll take a look at a very different type of exit due February 1. Whether one of the EU’s top HR people publicly accusing her new bosses of being cold, distant and — more generally speaking — mean, sets a good example is questionable. But if you’re on your way out anyway, why not make a statement you’ll be remembered for.

Just one piece of advice, kids: Don’t try this at home. (If you do, get your Umlaute right.)

BOMBSHELL EMAIL: Irène Souka, who will retire at the end of the month as the Commission’s director general for human resources, left a stinky parting gift in the inbox of Björn Seibert, the president’s chief of Cabinet, in the form of an email with thousands of people in copy, seen by Playbook. The subject line: “It’s all about respect.”

Spreading the word: On Tuesday afternoon, Souka sent a farewell note to her department (and her high-level network, which includes other DGs) announcing her departure after what she described as a “protracted period of uncertainty” since the new Commission took office. In the email, Souka shared a note she said she had sent to Seibert the night before and “forwarded to the Commissioner” Johannes Hahn.

Left in the dark: In the email to “dear Bjoern,” Souka said she had offered to stay longer to “help the new Commission during the first year of its mandate,” but did not get the response she had hoped for and was left in the dark about how long she was needed, or wanted. “Today, just 4 days from my retirement date, I am still no closer … to knowing the final position of the political authorities in order to provide the staff of DG HR with some clarity about my situation,” she wrote.

Don’t cry for Commission’s HR chief - Souka

Don’t cry for Commission’s HR chief

Staff didn’t think of Irène Souka as their defender — they saw her as the president’s enforcer.

By TIM KING 1/29/20, 5:23 PM CET Updated 2/3/20, 4:53 AM CET

Irène Souka’s chief complaint is that she was left hanging | Etienne Ansotte/European Union

It would be an extraordinary achievement if Irène Souka, who in her 11 years as head of the European Commission’s human resources department built a reputation for the merciless execution of her political masters’ wishes, were to garner sympathy for the brutality of her own departure.

Historical decision of the Romanian High Court: Family-based foster care can no longer be restricted!

Historical decision of the Romanian High Court: Family-based foster care can no longer be restricted!

February 6, 20200 Comments

The Romania Without Orphans Alliance (ARFO), represented by the Law Firm of Ra?iu & Ra?iu, obtained a definitive judgment of the High Court of Cassation and Justice (ICCJ) that cancelled certain restrictive provisions in the law governing the placement of children in family based foster care within the child protection system.

Back in 2015, the Ministry of Labor and Social Justice in Romania limited the chances of children in the system of having a foster care placement family through Ordinance 1733. As a result of its issuance, many orphanages used the existence of this regulation to prohibit children from having a chance to be in family care.

“After the issuance of Ordinance 1733, we received word from all over the country that requests for family based foster care for children from residential care centers were being refused because on this very ordinance. Unfortunately, there are many children who could have had a family but are still in orphanages due to these provisions which have been proven to be illegal,” said Liviu Mih?ileanu, President of the Romania Without Orphans Alliance.

Rupa to publish Jennifer by NANDITA PURI

Rupa to publish Jennifer by NANDITA PURI

03/02/2020

Despite all manner of hardship that she has had to endure, Jennifer has survived. What she deserves now is to live with dignity.

ABOUT THE BOOK (INR 295, 240 PP)

Seattle, Washington, 1990. It was a cold February day when eight-year-old Jennifer ‘Pinky’ Francis stepped on the American soil for the first time, little knowing that her life was to change forever. Her Indian passport contained no last name. Unbeknown to her poor and illiterate parents, she had been illegally trafficked into the US under the garb of adoption by the very people who had been entrusted with her care.

The changed face of inter-country adoption post-2010

Detailed research by the Adoption Authority shows that there were 4,989 inter-country adoptions approved in Ireland, between January 1991 and September 2019.

In the first decade under examination, from January 1991 to October 2010, there were 4,282 inter-country adoptions from 33 countries. The vast majority of the overall figure, therefore, took place in the years to October 2010.

And, 83% of these children came from just five countries – Russia, Romania, Vietnam, China and Ethiopia.

Steep decline

From November 2010 to September 2019, there were 707 intercountry adoptions from 23 countries – comparatively a steep decline in numbers.