Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

More single women adopting children in India, shows data

75 of them adopted a child in 2015; the number increased to 93 in 2016

- Moushumi Das Gupta moushumi.gupta@hindustant­imes.com

With growing awareness and changing social mores, the trend of single women coming forward to adopt children is growing in India, government figures indicate.

Since August 2015, when new adoption guidelines were introduced that made online registrati­on mandatory for parents wanting to adopt, 412 single women have registered with the Central Adoption Resource Informatio­n and Guidance System (CARINGS). It is a portal run by the Central Adoption Resource Authority (CARA), an autonomous body under the women and child developmen­t (WCD) ministry that monitors and regulates adoption of Indian children.

Of this, 75 single women adopted a child in 2015. The number increased to 93 in 2016. Overall, 2,903 and 2,671 children were adopted in India in 2015 and 2016.

The number may not be much if one considers the overall adoption figures and also the 2011 Cen- sus data that pegged the number of single women (unmarried, widow, divorcee) in India at 71.4 million. However, gender experts say it’s a welcome trend, considerin­g the societal pressure on single women wanting to adopt.

Compared to the trend, very few single men are coming forward to adopt. Since 2015, of the 28 single men who registered with CARA, only five adopted children in 2015 and seven in 2016.

The new adoption guidelines allow single parents to adopt a child. However, a single male is not eligible to adopt a girl child. A single parent will cease to be eligible to adopt a child if he attains the age of 55. “Single women were allowed to adopt children earlier also, but not many came forward. But with awareness and societal attitude towards single women changing, more of them are coming forward to adopt. Transparen­t adoption procedures have also helped,” Colonel Deepak Kumar, CARA secretary, said.

WCD ministry officials admit that many adoption agencies are not very encouragin­g when single women come to adopt.

The overall adoption figures, however, continue to be low. In 2016-17 (till March 14), 2,671 children were adopted within the country. Though there is no official data, surveys by NGOs say there are approximat­ely 50,000 orphans in India. Ministry officials say the reason for this is the availabili­ty of fewer children, who are legally free for adoption in the formal system.

WCD minister Maneka Gandhi wrote to health minister JP Nadda, requesting him to take action against “unscrupulo­us” nursing homes, hospitals and agents who do not register under the legal system those children who are born to unwed mothers or parents not desiring a child.

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