Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Some foreign nationals who came to adopt kids stranded

- Amrita Madhukalya amrita.madhukalya@hindustant­imes.com ■

NEW DELHI: For Georgia residents Whitney and Mike Saville, their trip to India in March was a realisatio­n of a long-time dream of adopting a child. They came to India on March 6, after a two year wait.

The paperwork for a passport and a US visa for their adopted daughter was pending when India announced a three-week lockdown starting March 25. The Savilles were stuck in India.

The couple’s three sons, all between the ages of 4 and 7, were back home in Atlanta. Mike tried to fly back while Whitney stayed in India but the plan, early in the lockdown, went nowhere. The couple then made a video, asking for help. The Savilles weren’t alone. Foreign nationals who came to India to adopt children from countries such as the US, Italy and Malta were stranded.

Col (retd) Deepak Kumar of the Central Adoption Resource Authority (CARA) said that in April alone, the agency they helped four such couples. Foreign nationals usually come to India after a court order on the adoption has been pronounced. After this, the passport of the child is processed, and CARA sends a confirmati­on... Finally, for an exit visa, the local Foreigners Regional Registrati­on Office needs to issue a permit, Kumar said. “In all the cases we processed in April, we wrote to the FRRO after we got requests from foreign embassies. The FRRO processed these requests in less than a day, and in one case, in less than an hour,” Kumar said

In the case of the Savilles, Georgia Senator David Perdue worked with the US state department and the Embassy in New Delhi to process their safe return.

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