Dear all,

Latest update: Norway NRI case: Uncle to get custody of kids
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/norway-nri-case-uncle-to-take-custody-of-kids/224141-2.html



Background information:

Child right laws in Norway are very strict. It is applicable to
all children residing in Norway irrespective of their  gender, nationality,
ethnicity, religion.  It was Abhigyan's (one of the two children)
 “erratic” behaviour at school which made the school authorities suspect
that he was probably not being brought up well. The child protection
services people started visiting the Bhattacharya household for an hour
every week and decided that Sagarika was not capable of looking after her
children as she “was in depression, tired and had no patience”. They said
the mother “over-fed” her child, fed with fingers and the boy slept with
his father.

Among the reasons listed by Norwegian child welfare authorities for taking
away the three-year-old son and one-year-old daughter of an expatriate
Indian couple were unsuitable toys and clothes, insufficient room for the
children to play in the house and the son not having his own bed.

The couple, Anurup and Sagarika Bhattacharya, have battled the Child
Welfare Services in Stavenger, 500 km from the Norwegian capital, for the
last eight months against these and other perceived shortcomings in their
parenting.

It began when, acting on complaints from the local child care centre at
Stavenger, where Anurup works as a geo-scientist with American firm
Halliburton, the couple were placed under observation by the area's
state-run Child Welfare Services.

After a few visits, on May 12, 2011, child welfare workers took away the
Bhattacharyas' son, who was then two, and five-month-old daughter and
placed them in an emergency shelter.

Four days later, the parents appealed the case before the County Board,
which hears appeals in child welfare and social cases.

The Board was sympathetic to the couple. This is what it said:

“The county has noted that there is a danger that the child could fall down
from the bathinette and hurt itself. During the case, it became clear that
the couple does not own a basinette/diaper-changing table. The child's
diapers are being changed on a bed, an arrangement much lower than a
traditional Norwegian basinette/diaper-changing table.

*‘No accidents'*

“To this point, there have been no accidents while changing the diapers of
the child… The most important and conclusive point being: There was no
emergency in the home prior to the Child Welfare Services' first visit in
the family home. The problems occurred after representatives from the Child
Welfare Services arrived in the home. The mother got scared when it dawned
on her that the Child Welfare Services' might place her children outside of
their own home. That was a difficult situation, but the problems of this
situation should have been solved in a different and more thought-out way,
as opposed to deciding to send the children to an emergency shelter.”

On the 23rd of May, the county board concluded: “The requirements of the
law for emergency decisions of this kind were not fulfilled when the
decision was made. The conditions for maintaining the decision are not
fulfilled either… In the short term, there is reason to believe that the
conditions of the home will change, as the parents of the mother are coming
to Norway to help their daughter. The decision to place the children
outside the home is hereby cancelled.”

*New turn*

The Child Welfare Service appealed the sentence in the city court of
Stavanger, where the case took a new turn.

Its list of complaints against the parents was long. It said it had “severe
doubts” about the parents' ability to take care of their children, stating
that its main concern was that the mother did not “maintain” the children's
emotional needs.

The mother had admitted to slapping the son at one point, but the Child
Welfare Service noted that this was something she had never done again
after she became aware that it was illegal under Norwegian law.

Further, it listed other reasons, such as the house not having sufficient
room to play, and toys that were not age-suitable for the children, the son
not having his own bed, or linen or suitable clothes for his size.

*Mother's behaviour*

It expressed concern over the way the mother interacted with the infant
daughter. Noting that she handled the daughter with “sudden movements” it
concluded she was unable to hold the child in a proper way. It said that
the when the mother breast-fed the infant, she put her on her lap without
holding her, holding the head against the breast, but not close to her body.

The court decided that both the children would be taken from their home,
and that the time the parents would be allowed to meet their children would
be set to two hours, twice a year.

The court also pointed out that the grandparents' visit to Norway, which
the county board had emphasised as positive for the family, was for a
limited time and would not have an effect on the children's situation in a
long term perspective.

It described the family situation as “constant and urgent.”

When the Bhattacharyas' children were taken away from them, their daughter,
then aged five months, was still breast feeding.

The two siblings are now in two different “ethnic” foster homes.

Earlier, the Child Welfare Services had suggested that the parents be
allowed to meet the children twice a year for two hours each, but the
country board revised it in November that the two cannot be reunited with
their parents until they turn 18 in 2026 and 2028; until then, the two
children would be allowed to spend three hours a year with their parents,
in three separate visits, lasting an hour each.

As per recent update They could receive a good news soon.
http://www.ndtv.com/article/india/norway-vs-nri-parents-childrens-paternal-uncle-to-get-custody-170291
<http://www.ndtv.com/article/india/norway-custody-row-grandparents-likely-to-get-custody-as-compromise-169759&cp>




Regards,

Pankaj Barah
Trondheim, Norway


> Dear Friends:
>
> The following letter, reproduced, points out how nationalities can differ
> in parenting a child. It appeared in the daily Telegraph,UK, this morning.
>
> -bhuban
>
>
> By Dean Nelson, New Delhi.
>
>
> The parents were told the children will remain in foster care in Norway
> until they are 18 and that they will only have occasional contact with them.
>
> Norwegian officials have so far resisted calls for the children to be
> reunited with their grandparents in India pending an inquiry, and now
> India's external affairs minister has called for the children to be
> repatriated.
>
> The case has provoked an outcry in India, where mothers constantly push
> food into their toddlers' mouths and children often sleep in their parents'
> bed until they are six or seven.
>
> Sushma Swaraj, parliamentary leader of the opposition Bharatiya Janata
> Party, suggested the decision betrayed an ignorance of Indian culture.
>
> "I do not know the logic behind the Norwegian laws. One thing is clear –
> they do not know the Indian culture and sensibilities. The snatching of two
> little kids from their parents in Norway is shocking. I cannot imagine what
> parents and kids must be going through," she said.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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