India asks Germany to return 2-year-old Indian girl in foster care

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New Delhi (Reuters) – India on Friday urged Germany to send back a 2-year-old Indian girl who has been in its foster case system for more than 20 months, saying it is an infringement of her social, cultural and linguistic rights.

The child, Ariha Shah, was taken away from her Indian parents by German authorities in Berlin in September 2021 when she was seven months old. Her father was working in Germany at the time, but the parents have since returned to India.

Shah’s parents, according to Indian media reports, said she was accidentally injured by her grandmother who was visiting them from India, and authorities placed the girl in the custody of Germany’s Youth Welfare Office when they took her to a hospital.

Her custody has since become a diplomatic issue, with New Delhi taking it up with Germany’s foreign minister during a visit to India in December.

“We urge German authorities to do all that is necessary to send Ariha to India at the earliest, which is also her inalienable right as an Indian national,” Indian foreign ministry spokesperson Arindam Bagchi told reporters on Friday.

“Ariha’s continued placement in German foster care and infringement of her social, cultural and linguistic rights is of deep concern to the government of India and the parents,” he said.

Bagchi said the child’s best interests can be fully realised when she is in her home country where her socio-cultural rights can be safeguarded.

He said India has a robust child welfare and protection system, and there are potential foster parents in India who are willing to bring up the child in her own socio-cultural milieu if necessary.

Germany’s foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

During a visit to India in December, German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said the child was well and its “wellbeing is the first priority”.

She also said Germany was “bearing in mind the cultural identity of each child that is taken care of by the youth offices in Germany”.

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