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Adozioni Romania: "Violata la Convenzione ONU dell´89".

 

Statement by the Italian association Amici dei Bambini (Friends of Children) concerning adoption in Romania - 1989 UN Convention breached
Amici dei Bambini has lodged a petition with the Geneva Committee on the Rights of the Child concerning the new Romanian law on the protection of minors that entered into force on 1 January 2005. This law effectively bans international adoptions. The petition was drawn up on the basis of a memorandum prepared by the Milan-based Studio Legale Santa Maria, which is one of the leading European law firms in the field of international law and is acting for Amici dei Bambini on a pro bono basis in this crucial battle for human rights. "The law in question," notes the memorandum, "does not appear to comply with a child's fundamental right to have a family, as laid down in the International Convention on the Rights of the Child concluded in New York on 20 November 1989."
Technically, the Geneva Committee has the power to act on Amici dei Bambini's submission and ask the Romanian government to draft a new law that really guarantees children's rights.
The Romanian government unanimously approved last June a bill drawn up following sustained pressure from the EU, which called for comprehensive legislative reform in Romania to align it on EU countries. In practice, the law restricts international adoption to foreign?based grandparents of a child (see detailed account at annex), i.e. to blood relatives.

The rights of children in institutions: follow-up to Recommendation 1601 (2003) of the Parliamentary Assembly

See also Press release AFAENER:

18. The European Union regards the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child as an acquis communautaire. Under the new draft law, parties will be required to show what constitutes the best solution for the child in each individual case.

International Dove Ball to Honor Child Advocates

International Advocates for Children is holding its second International Dove Ball on February 5, 2005 at the Ritz-Carlton in downtown Atlanta, Georgia at 6:30 p.m. Child advocate and actress Jane Russell and Dutch State Parliament Member Maarten Brekelmans will be honored for thier efforts in working with orphaned and abandoned children.

(PRWEB) January 20, 2005 -- The International Dove Ball slated for February 5, 2005, at the Ritz-Carlton in downtown Atlanta at 6:30 p.m. will host a slew of attendees from politicians to CEOs to the citys socialites. The A-list includes Hollywood screen legend and adoptive parent Jane Russell along with Dutch State Parliament Member Maarten Brekelmans who are also serving as the Honorary Chairs for the event for their dedication to child advocacy.

Since the 1950s, Russell has facilitated the adoptive placement of nearly 38,000 children through her organization WAIF, which pioneered the adoption of children from foreign countries by American families and also helped match foster children in the US with permanent families. Adoption is one of the most important things in the world," says Russell an adoptive mother of two children.

Brekelmans echoes Russells sentiment and has also witnessed the need of parentless children first hand. After retiring a few years ago, he has dedicated his time to traveling through many countries mentoring and working with orphaned children -- children whose greatest desire is to have a family of their own.

The International Dove Ball will feature dinner, music, and both silent and live auctions. Proceeds from this event will go towards funding International Advocates for Childrens (IAC) initiatives. IAC, is a 501 (c) (3) non-profit organization, focused solely on protecting the rights of orphaned and abandoned children worldwide. The organization offers assistance to governments to build more efficient systems that will best serve children in need of loving and safe homes. For additional information on IAC, please visit www.iachildren.org. For tickets, volunteer and sponsorship opportunities please call Executive Director Lynda Lee Smith at  678-893-7470 .

A One-Woman War Against Intercountry Adoption

A One-Woman War Against Intercountry Adoption

By DIANE KUNZ and ANN REESE

February 4, 2005

Almost fifteen years ago the plight of Romania's abandoned children shocked the world. The crazed schemes of dictator Nicolae Ceausescu had doomed hundreds of thousands of children to a life in orphanages which were little more than warehouses. Spurred by televised images of caged children, and tales of AIDS spread among children in state care through forced blood transfusions, the world rallied to help these smallest victims of totalitarian excess. Financial aid and personal volunteers flowed into the country. Thousands of children were given permanent families by people who saw them as citizens of the world in need of nurturing homes, not as property of a sovereign state.

Time passed, and the world's attention turned to new, more immediate crises. With the spotlight removed, the children once again became pawns in a political process.

Judi Kloper home from her India trip scouting for children

Message: 5533 From: JudiKO@... Received: Do Feb 03, 2005 8:30

Subject: from judi, home from india

Dear Everyone,

Having arrived home from three weeks in India (last weekend), I am finally

catching up with emails (704) and phone messages (13, not bad!) and lots of

Patrizia de Luca - DG JUST

Check exact date when Patrizia started working in DG JUST in civil rights unit

t

Proceso de adopción en Perú muestra aumento

Google translation:

Adoption process in Peru shows increase

LIMA, Peru / EFE

The process of adoption of children in Peru showed a slight increase in 2004 after the government approved a law to simplify procedures and reduce to six months the time duration. In 2003, the number of adoptions recorded by the Ministry of Women was 17 and in 2004, 187 of which 47% corresponds to foreign applicants. The law passed six months ago left to the National Family Welfare Institute's work to analyze the legal situation of children placed in their hostels.

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Illegal Adoption to be Heard in Court Again

Illegal Adoption to be Heard in Court Again
Volgograd Regional Court is getting ready to again hear the case of Nadezhda Fratti, citizen of Italy. N. Fratti has been charged with bribing officials and documents’ forgery to accelerate adoption of Russia’s children by the foreigners.
Following the appeal of Ms Fratti’s lawyers, Presidium of the Supreme Court of Russia has sent back her case to Volgograd due to the procedures’ violations, said representatives of the Volgograd Region’s prosecutors. The date of the first session has not been set yet.

On December 30, 2002, the Volgograd Regional Court sentenced Nadezhda Fratti, citizen of Russia and Italy, to be put on parole for seven years with five-year residence in Volzhsky-town, the Volgograd Region, where she had last lived. Nadezhda Fratti was found guilty in bribing the officials and forgery of documents which she had done to speed up adoption.

Simultaneously, Antonina Tekucheva, head physician at Mikhailovsky house of baby care, Tatyana Chaplina, former head of Kirovsky children’s home in Volgograd, Valentina Gerusova, former expert of the region’s education committee, were accused of bribetaking and found guilty.


www.kommersant.com


http://www.kommersant.com/p-4137/r_500/Illegal_Adoption_to_be_Heard_in_Court
_Again/

KYRGYZSTAN: Focus on gay and lesbian rights

Reuters

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/IRIN/36a54bc140eef1e95f0110d366f6e218.htm

Source: IRIN News

11 January 2005

1
KYRGYZSTAN: Focus on gay and lesbian rights


Bishkek - Kyrgyzstan is known as an island of gay tolerance in an otherwise oppressive region. Some gay people come here from Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan, where homosexuality is punishable by law, in search of a more favourable and accepting environment. The number of gay and lesbian groups in the country is growing as a consequence.

On Saturday a new support group called "Labrys" was launched in the capital, Bishkek, to promote the rights of lesbians. The Labrys, or double-bladed axe, comes from the goddess Demeter (Artemis). It has become a symbol of lesbian and feminist strength and self-sufficiency. "It will organise lesbians, provide them with psychological and legal help, and work on establishing a more tolerant attitude towards lesbians in the country," Anna Dovgopol, leader of the group, funded by money from the Netherlands, told IRIN.

The new organisation will publish a monthly magazine, organise seminars on health issues, and open a telephone hot-line and resource centre to offer advice and support. Counselling and cultural events will also be offered. Lesbianism remains very much a taboo in this conservative Central Asian nation. "If my family ever finds out that I belong to the group, I will be in deep trouble," one of the women at the launch, who refused to be photographed, told IRIN.

THE REALITY
Although the attitude to gays and lesbians in Kyrgyzstan is less hostile than in neighbouring states, people of non-traditional sexual orientation, especially gay men, are one of the most oppressed and discriminated groups in the country, according to recent research conducted by Denis van der Veur for the Dutch HIVOS Fund.

Most gays and lesbians in the country live in the capital, Bishkek
, or in the northern part of the country, which is more liberal than other regions. In Bishkek, according to the Oasis NGO, the only organisation fighting to protect the rights of gay men, there are around 35,000 people of a different sexual orientation. The NGO officially works with just 6,500 of them who are open about their sexual orientation. Others remain undercover.

Those who decide to go public risk physical and verbal abuse, possible loss of work and unwanted attention from the police and authorities.

Veur, who conducted research with more than 50 gay men in the capital, found that they "describe their environment in Kyrgyzstan as negative, hostile and even violent. They refer to the prevalence of discrimination in public places such as bars and restaurants, from where they are often asked to leave." Around 65 percent of men surveyed said they had been physically or psychologically abused because of their sexual orientation.

" Homosexuals are still poorly informed about their rights," Vladimir Tyupin, the leader of Oasis, said. "Many of them do not know that homosexuality is legal in Kyrgyzstan, and they often are ashamed to ask for legal help. Although senior policemen seem to be understanding, it is the lower ranks, the street patrol officers, who chase and abuse gay men in Kyrgyzstan."

Theoretically, no one can refuse a gay person a job due to his or her sexual orientation. In reality, homosexuals are sacked under some pretext when their sexuality is revealed, but the official reason for their sacking does not mention their sexual orientation. A recent Oasis opinion poll indicated that most employers in the region would not hire a gay or lesbian if they were aware of the person's sexual orientation.

The situation of homosexuals in prisons is especially daunting as gay men are often openly victimised by inmates and the authorities. Almost half of such people in custody are physically abused, according to research.

LESBIANS ALSO FACE HOSTILITY AND REJECTION
The attitude towards lesbians is less hostile then towards homosexual men. Local tradition allows more freedom for public displays of affection by women. Nevertheless, in Kyrgyzstan lesbians are less visible than gay men and there are no figures for how many there are in the country.

Elena, a gay woman, told IRIN that she had spent most of her life in denial of her sexuality. "At some point I was fed up with hiding, living someone else's life... The most surprising was the reaction from my close friends. Although they are modern [in many of their ways], graduates who have travelled abroad, their reaction to my coming out was shocking. It is a complete rejection."

Despite the fact that the situation in Kyrgyzstan is better than in other Central Asian counties, Elena said that she and most of her friends dream about migrating to western Europe or the USA. "We want to feel free to be who we are, to feel like normal people." Lesbian activists say there have been seven known cases so far in which homosexuals from Kyrgyzstan received asylum abroad for "the violation of their human rights" at home.

Dovgopol from Labrys recounted how, in one of the city's cafes, lesbians were refused service due to their sexual orientation and were forced to leave. "They did not complain, because filing a complaint would mean a public and political coming our for lesbians and none of them were willing to do this. They were afraid to be openly lesbian in Kyrgyzstan."

DOUBLE LIFE IN THE SOUTH
In future, gay rights organisations are planning to expand their activities to other regions such as Osh and Jalalabat in the south of Kyrgyzstan. These are conservative and traditional regions, where most of the population is Muslim. According to Oasis, research among 2,500 gay and lesbians in Osh city suggests that those of a different sexual orientation have no choice but to lead a double life. Many gay men are forced to get married and have children, and hide their sexuality from their family.

There are no support groups protecting the rights of sexual minorities in the south, because it is almost impossible to find someone to lead such an organisation. Many are afraid that participation in such an organisation would ruin their career, and relations with their family and friends.

For lesbians, according to Anna Dovgopol, it is equally difficult: "The society in the provinces is so closed, the topic of homosexuality remains taboo. For a lesbian there it is almost impossible to find other gay people."

CONDEMNATION FROM RELIGIOUS LEADERS
Religious leaders, for the most part, do not exhibit tolerance towards gays and some have even appealed for proactive measures to be taken against them. "I think we should unite our efforts and maybe start punishing people for such behaviour. Thousands of Muslims will be punished by Allah for not preventing, not stopping, lesbians and homosexuals," said the leader of Muslims in Kyrgyzstan, Mufti Lugmar azhi Guahunov.

The Russian Orthodox Church in Kyrgyzstan seems equally hostile to sexual minorities
. "Such tolerance washes out the essence of absolute moral values. Of course, our church will not fight homosexuality with weapons, but we will never tolerate it," Igor Dronov, a senior priest of the church in Bishkek, said.

LEGAL RECOGNITION
During the Soviet period, homosexuality was considered a crime. Article 121 of the USSR penal code sentenced men for "sodomy" for up to five years in jail. Officially, about 50,000 men were put away in Soviet jails or sent to Gulags under such charges; the real figure is believed to be much higher.

In Kyrgyzstan the ban on homosexuality was lifted in 1998 after concerted pressure from international human rights organisations. However, the Kyrgyz constitution does not explicitly mention the right to chose one's own sexual orientation.

The Kyrgyz legal system does not appear to be changing to take any further steps to secure the rights of gays and lesbians. It is too early to raise the question of official gay marriages, and legal adoption for same-sex couples in Kyrgyzstan is a long way off, activists say.