Mother Teresa’s Missionaries of Charity ends adoption services in India

The decision was taken after India amended its rules to allow single parents to adopt

Update: 2015-10-12 14:22 GMT
In this 1978 photo, Mother Teresa cradles an armless baby girl at her orphanage in Kolkata (Photo: AP/File)

Kolkata: The Missionaries of Charity, the Roman Catholic order founded by Mother Teresa, has decided to close its adoption services in India after the country amended its rules to make single parents eligible to adopt.

The religious order said that allowing single or divorced parents to adopt goes against its beliefs.

India's Central Adoption Resource Authority reviewed its guidelines in July in an effort to make adoptions more transparent and enable more people to adopt children. It also made it mandatory for all prospective parents to register with the national adoption agency.

Previously, adoption agencies and homes across the country could bend adoption rules or make it harder for certain people to adopt because there was no national monitoring mechanism.

The new government order states that "any prospective adoptive parent, irrespective of his marital status and whether or not he has his own biological son or daughter, can adopt a child."

The Missionaries of Charity looks after abandoned children, including those with special needs, at homes across the country called Nirmal Shishu Bhawans.

Read: Mamata Banerjee supports Missionaries of Charity's stand on adoption

While the order will no longer place children for adoption, it said it would continue to care for abandoned children who aren't chosen for adoption.

"Missionaries of Charity has decided to?discontinue adoption of children at its centers after the government has announced its new guidelines. But the organization will continue to nurture and provide shelters to the destitute and orphan children," Sunita Kumar, the group's spokeswoman, said Monday.

A government minister criticized the order's decision. "They have cited ideological issues with our adoption guidelines related to giving a child up for adoption to single, unwed mothers. They have their own agenda and now when they have to come under a unified secular agenda, they are refusing it," Women and Child Development Minister Maneka Gandhi said last week, after the order had voiced its displeasure with the government's new adoption policies.

There are no official data on the number of children available for adoption in India, though estimates by several rights groups say it is in the tens of millions. But the country's adoption rates have been low, largely because of the amount of bureaucratic red tape involved.

The absence of any national monitoring of adoption procedures until very recently has also meant that a thriving black market for adoption and child trafficking has grown. Last year, the Central Adoption Resource Authority placed only 4,362 children for adoption.

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