The children's adoption was held up since 2013, as the biological mother, after initially abandoning them, sought their custody when the Child Welfare Committee (CWC) put the kids up for adoption by a Canada-based couple of Indian origin.
In 2014, the high court stayed the adoption process and allowed the biological mother to take her children. But, when the mother failed to do so and did not even meet them after the high court order, the CWC once again approached the HC and sought permission to allow adoption by another couple, who were based in the United States.
"I have before me today what I can only describe as an utterly heart-rending situation. There are two minors who have, for the better part of their childhood, been footballed between their birth mother, one agency, another agency, been once previously placed for adoption only to see that possible dream evaporate and have now been suggested for adoption again. Their bond with their mother, if it existed, was broken," the court said.
The judge noted that while the mother may have abandoned
the children in dire circumstances the first time, the court had at the cost of the first adoptive parents and at the cost of the welfare of the children given the mother another chance.
"Why did she not take it? Why did she never meet the children after December 2014? We may never know and it is now for the best, and certainly for the best for these two children, that it stays that way for all time. To reverse the April 2015 order of the high court forfeiting the mother's rights on the children would be to subject them to a horror they have done nothing to deserve," the court said.
The boy, who was born in December 2007, and his sister, born in January 2009, were abandoned by their mother and found on December 31, 2012, by police at Ulhasnagar in neighbouring Thane district.
They were taken to the Child Welfare Committee which put them up for adoption.
A Canada-based couple of Indian origin expressed the desire to the CWC to adopt the children, following which an Inter-Country Foreign Adoption Petition was filed in the HC.
After the DNA tests confirmed that the woman was the biological mother of the children, the HC in December 2014 allowed her to take the children's custody from the Children of the World India Trust, where the two were kept.
In April 2015, the trust approached the HC and informed it that since December 2014, the biological mother had not taken the children back and not even met them once.
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