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Put up for adoption, but future uncertain

Put up for adoption, but future uncertain

Nisha Nambiar Posted online: Friday , Apr 09, 2010 at 0313 hrs
Pune : CARA asks Preet Mandir to discontinue inter-country adoption; agency puts forth petitions of 25 children

 

As many as 25 children put up for inter-country adoption in the past two months by city-based adoption centre Preet Mandir are facing an uncertain future. The Central Adoption Resource Authority (CARA) had, in a letter dated March 11, told the adoption centre to discontinue its inter-country adoption proceedings from February 15.

However, Preet Mandir claims it received the letter only by April and the papers of the 25 children had been moved by then. The CARA, an autonomous body under the Ministry of Women and Child Development, had also asked Preet Mandir not to seek any foreign placement for its children till it gets a clean chit from the CBI or the Bombay High Court.

Preet Mandir had filed 16 petitions of in-country adoptions and 25 inter-country adoptions during these months. “These 25 kids have been cleared for foreign adoption but they may not finally get to be adopted as per this notification. All these children will face problems,” said Suhas Deshpande, liaisoning officer, Preet Mandir.

The two centres of Preet Mandir — at Camp and Kalyani Nagar in the city — have 172 children.

The letter issued by CARA deputy director Dr Jagannath Pati says, “Preet Mandir is hereby directed not to send any referral of any foreign agency/Central authority till it is given a clean chit by the CBI or the High Court of judicature at Bombay or the situation is reviewed by CARA. This, however, will not affect any pipeline cases where CARA has already issued NOCs prior to February 15 and in all such cases, Preet Mandir is competent to file petitions in the competent court.”

A senior officer from CARA said they had sent copies of the letter to Preet Mandir, the secretary and commissioner of the Women and Child Development Department, Maharashtra, and the Adoption Coordinating Agency, Pune. “We want a status quo to be maintained till the investigations are completed. However, the state government has not placed any restrictions on Preet Mandir for domestic adoptions.”

Deshpande said, “We would not have put forth the petitions for inter-country adoptions if we had got the letter on time. But we received the letter only this month. We have replied to the notice, requesting them to consider these cases ‘as those in pipeline’. However, we are yet to get any reply.”

Women and Child Development Department commissioner Bajirao Jadhav said it was the responsibility of the Adoption Council of India to intervene. A member of the Indian Council for Social Welfare, the scrutiny board for adoptions in Pune, said they were yet to get a copy of the report. “If the CARA has issued the notification, the adoption centre has to abide by it.”

The adoption centre had faced investigations about alleged malpractices earlier also, and it had been cleared by investigating agencies a couple of times. The Bombay High Court had, in an order on November 20 last year, asked the CBI to conduct preliminary inquiry on points not considered earlier and this report has to be submitted next month.

WACAP's representative office in Primorye

vn.vladnews.ru/Arch/2004/ISS422/News/upd30_2.HTM - [Cached Version]
Published on: 6/30/2004    Last Visited: 8/25/2007  

 "The child's nationality is not of prime importance for potential parents, it's far more important to establish warm relations with the kid so that he would feel loved and cared for and there's no difference where he is from-India, China or Russia," told Michael Feltman, Chief Executive Officer for World Association for Children and Parents (WACAP), in an interview with the Vladivostok newspaper reporter during his three-day working visit to the city.

WACAP's representative office in Primorye was settled 10 years ago and developed strong cooperation with the regional official bodies in charge of adoption issues, Feltman said.
http://www.zoominfo.com/people/Feltman_L._376014014.aspx

 

Minutes CP meeting 9 April 2010

Minutes CP meeting 9 April 2010

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Child Snatching By The State Conference – 10th April

Child Snatching By The State Conference – 10th April

Article by Brian Gerrish

mar 25th 2010

Update: Robert Green, Anne & Hollie Greig will attend. Robert plans to speak. Further details to come.

Saturday 10 April 2010 Start: 11 a.m. Finish: 5 p.m.

Little Maya Esther's Adoption Is Official

Little Maya Esther's Adoption Is Official

Evacuated to U.S. After Earthquake, Haitian Orphan's Adoption Is Finalized
After Haiti earthquake, parents lost touch and were frantic with worry.

An orphaned, Haitian girl who was evacuated after this year's devastating earthquake has been officially adopted by an Iowa couple.

Matt and Mandy Poulter had been finalizing their adoption of Maya Esther, 4, when the earthquake shook Port-au-Prince Jan. 12.

The Poulters of Pella, Iowa, were beside themselves with worry for the girl.

With Port-au-Prince in shambles and most major communications down, the Poulters couldn't make contact with the orphanage where Maya Esther was living while they awaited a visa for her.

Click HERE to read more about Maya Esther's incredible journey on Robin Roberts' page.

Like so many others waiting to hear news about loved ones, the couple prayed for their daughter's safety but were left to imagine the worst.

After three excruciating days of being unable to reach the orphanage via phone or the Internet, they gave the ABC News program "Nightline" directions to the Central Texas Orphan Mission Alliance near Port-au-Prince.

"Good Morning America" anchor Robin Roberts and her crew drove through the broken streets until they found the orphanage. It was damaged but Maya Esther and other children there were all right, frightened but safe.

Mandy Poulter was exuberant when Roberts, via Skype, gave her the news.

"We definitely found her," Roberts said. "I am looking at her right now. She's OK. She's not injured. She's ready to go home to Iowa."

Through her tears, Poulter gave Roberts a message to convey to the girl, who was known simply as "Esther" in Haiti: "Can you tell her that Mommy and Daddy love her and we will come as soon as we can to bring her home," she said. "Just tell her we love her, and give her a hug and tell her Mommy and Daddy will be there."

Roberts whispered the message into the sleeping child's ear: "Esther, your mom and dad love you, and they are going to be coming to get you as soon as they can."

Wearing her special "adoption day" pin, Maya Esther headed Wednesday to a Marion County court in Knoxville, Iowa, for the final step in her adoption journey.

Meet Maya Carolyn Esther Poulter

"Just like a biological child grows in a mother's stomach, an adopted child grows in her mother's heart," Poulter said from the stand in court. "We are so blessed God chose her to be in our family."

With a final bang of the gavel, the adoption was official.

As many as 250,000 people are believed to have been killed as a result of the 7.0-magnitude quake.

Billions of dollars from around the world have been pledged to aid Haiti's recovery.

ABC News' Thea Trachtenberg and Lana Zak contributed to this report.

Madonna takes Lourdes back to visit the Malawi orphanage from where she adopted David Banda

Madonna takes Lourdes back to visit the Malawi orphanage from where she adopted David Banda

By Lizzie Smith
Last updated at 10:43 PM on 07th April 2010

 

Adopted boy, 3, in a coma; parents investigated

Adopted boy, 3, in a coma; parents investigated
APEX - Police are investigating the parents of a 3-year-old adopted child they think may have been the victim of severe abuse, according to court records made public Thursday.

The child is in a coma at Duke Hospital. Police are investigating because doctors told investigators the child's head trauma was inconsistent with his parents' account of how he was injured, court records show.

Records also show Wake County Child Protective Services has previously investigated abuse and neglect reports concerning the child since he was adopted from an orphanage in China in November.

On March 19, emergency workers took the child, Adam Stein of 121 Homegate Circle in Apex, to WakeMed in Raleigh. He was breathing but unconscious after suffering a traumatic head injury, according to a search warrant application filed at the Wake County Clerk of Courts Office.

When emergency workers arrived at the home, they found the child at the bottom of a staircase, Apex Police Department detective Worth T. Brown stated in the court affidavit. The child's parents, Philip and Michele Stein, were home, along with two neighbors, when emergency workers arrived.

Michele Stein told the EMS workers that the child had fallen down the stairs earlier in the day while her husband was still at work, Brown stated in the search warrant application. She said she thought Adam was fine and put him down for a nap.

When her husband came home from work, he checked on the boy and found him sleeping. Philip Stein said he tried to wake Adam a short time later but he was unresponsive, court records show.

The Steins called two neighbors, a nurse and emergency medical technician, who tried to wake Adam and told Philip Stein to call 911. Emergency room doctors determined that Adam's skull had been fractured with large bruises in the frontal region of his brain, Brown stated in the affidavit.

Adam was transferred March 20 to Duke, where Dr. Karen St. Claire with the child abuse and neglect team determined the injury was inconsistent with falling down six carpeted stairs.

Investigators later learned that the child had been admitted to the UNC-Chapel Hill Burn Center in January with second- and third-degree burns to both his hands.

Michele Stein told authorities that she had turned on hot water in the bathtub to give Adam a bath and had left him briefly unattended while she went to get him clean pajamas. Investigators with the county's child protective services suspected abuse, but determined the incident to be more consistent with "poor supervision and neglect," according to the affidavit.

In February, workers at the day care Adam attends noticed bruises on his back and leg. They also noticed that the child had lost weight since enrolling.

Neither Brown nor the Steins were available for comment.

thomasi.mcdonald@nando.com or 919-829-4533

Mom, dad warned Dakota County: Boy is a danger

Mom, dad warned Dakota County: Boy is a danger

By JIM ANDERSON, Star Tribune

April 8, 2010

Exactly one year before an eighth-grader allegedly pulled a gun in Hastings Middle School on Monday, the adoptive parents who plucked the boy from a bleak Russian orphanage at age 3 had warned Dakota County officials in a letter that he was potentially violent.

Their fears were based on a decade of wrenching struggle, dealing with a child who had deep-seated mental and emotional problems they hadn't realized until bringing him into their home, and into their hearts.

Kyrgyzstan ‘family-oriented'

Published Thursday April 8, 2010

Kyrgyzstan ‘family-oriented'

By Juan Perez Jr.

WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER

Neil Moseman and his wife, Maureen, never encountered tumult or violence in two visits to the Kyrgyz capital of Bishkek.

Professor Kevin Browne meets House of Lords peers on child protection issues

Professor Kevin Browne meets House of Lords peers on child protection issues.

Professor Browne is well known for his research in child protection in which he has examined the impact of poverty, both in the UK and Europe. He calculates that children from deprived backgrounds have 16 times more chance of being abused or neglected compared to other children. He has conducted studies in cooperation with the British and Romanian Governments and a wide range of organisations including Save the Children, UNICEF and the WHO. The new Centre for Forensic and Family research at the University of Nottingham, led by Professor Kevin Browne, has just received financial support from the EU DAPHNE programme on violence to women and children, to explore the extent of child abandonment in Europe and identify best practices for its prevention. The team has alreadyidentified the extent of young childrenin residential care across Europe and the best practices associated with de-institutionalising these children and building services to support the children returned to families in the community.
Posted on Thursday 8th April 2010