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CARA asks State adoption agencies to strengthen counselling process
The Central Adoption Resource Authority (CARA) has issued comprehensive directions to all State Adoption Resource Agencies (SARAs) to strengthen and institutionalise structured counselling services throughout the adoption process — from pre-adoption, to during adoption, and post-adoption stages. These directions have been issued via a communication dated July 7 under the powers conferred by the Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2015 (as amended in 2021), and are aligned with the provisions laid down under the Adoption Regulations, 2022, an official statement said here on Thursday. CARA is a statutory body of the Ministry of Women and Child Development which acts as the nodal agency for the adoption of Indian children, both within the country and internationally. This latest initiative aims to reinforce the psychosocial support framework for all key stakeholders — prospective adoptive parents (PAPs), adopted children, and biological parents who surrender their child for adoption. Critical component CARA has emphasised that counselling is a critical component of the adoption process and is necessary to ensure emotional preparedness, smooth transition, and long-term well-being of both the children and the families involved. The memorandum reiterates the mandatory nature of structured and need-based counselling services, as prescribed under various provisions of the Adoption Regulations, 2022. The State adoption boards have been instructed to designate or empanel qualified counsellors at the district and State levels. These professionals should ideally have a background in child psychology, mental health, or social work. It has been made mandatory to provide pre-adoption counselling to prospective adoptive parents during the Home Study Report (HSR) process, in accordance with Regulation 10(7). Additionally, older children must receive counselling support both before and during the adoption process, the statement said. It said post-adoption counselling is to be provided in specific situations, such as when an adopted child initiates a root search to trace their origins, in cases of non-adjustment between the child and adoptive family, or in any situation indicating potential disruption or dissolution of the adoption. The directions also include provisions for psychosocial intervention in any other circumstances as assessed by the Specialised Adoption Agencies (SAAs) or District Child Protection Units (DCPUs).


India Today
3 hours ago
- India Today
Bombay High Court dismisses Indian couple's plea to adopt American nephew
In an unprecedented case where an American child was to be adopted by his uncle and aunt from Pune, the Bombay High Court noted that there is no provision in the Juvenile Justice (JJ) Act or the Adoption Regulations for the adoption of a child of foreign citizenship, even by relatives, unless the child is either 'in need of care and protection' or a 'child in conflict with law.' The court thus dismissed the plea of the childless bench of Justices Revati Mohite Dere and Dr. Neela Gokhale observed that the petitioners argued that in the absence of any specific provision, the court, under its extraordinary jurisdiction, has the power to permit such an adoption and issue directions to the Central Adoption Resource Authority (CARA). However, the court rejected this case involved a couple residing in Pune, both Indian citizens, who sought to adopt a US-born minor who is the biological child of the petitioner-wife's sister. The child was born in America in 2019 but has been living with the couple in Pune. The couple approached CARA to formalise the adoption, but CARA refused to register them on the grounds that the Adoption Regulations do not provide for the adoption of an American citizen. The petitioners, who profess the Muslim faith, do not have a codified personal law governing Shirin Merchant, appearing for the couple, submitted that their additional concern was that US authorities might refuse to renew the child's passport without a valid adoption order, rendering his stay in India potentially petitioners pointed out that the child is now six years old, attends school in India, and is required to travel to the US every year to renew his to do so could result in him becoming an illegal migrant in India. Therefore, considering the child's stability, identity and future prospects, they requested the Court to allow the petition and direct CARA to give its clearance for the CARA stated that while it was sympathetic to the petitioners' predicament, it is bound by the prevailing legal Y S Bhate submitted that while regulations exist for couples from foreign countries adopting Indian children, this was a rare case involving an American child being adopted by Indian citizens, something that has not occurred submitted that neither the JJ Act nor the Adoption Regulations apply to the adoption of a child who is an American further stated that, in such circumstances, CARA cannot give clearance for the adoption unless the child is first adopted in the US under its applicable proposed a solution: the petitioners could adopt the child in the US as per American laws or the child could apply for Indian citizenship through the the surrender of the child by his biological parents, adoption could then be facilitated in India under the JJ Act and prevailing Adoption the couple declined this suggestion, the bench, in its order dismissing the plea, stated: "There is no fundamental right of the petitioners to adopt an American child, who does not fall within the applicability of the JJ Act and the Regulations thereunder, even if he is born to Indian parents. Neither is there any violation of any fundamental right of the child of American nationality to be adopted by an Indian citizen. The predicament of the petitioners can be easily resolved in the manner suggested by CARA."- EndsTune InMust Watch