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Press release: Please get involved! Demonstration and Petition

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Vali NasJul 20, 2004

This is the press release about the demonstration on Wednesday July 21

in Washington DC protesting the ban on international adoption, including

Michele Petite signs Tobacco Deal

SECTION INVESTIGATIONS

INVESTIGATION

Will EU renew $1.25bn deal with tobacco firm PMI?

Michel Petite signs the tobacco agreement on behalf of the European Commission, 9 July 2004, with on the left PMI CEO André Calantzopoulos, and behind them, standing, budget commissioner Schreyer (Photo: European Commission)

By PETER TEFFER

Letter European Commission to Sara Dillon

Letter European Commission to US adoption lobbyist

More and more U.S. birth mothers choose to place their infants with Canadian families


  
 
While U.S. couples spend tens of thousands to adopt children from abroad, more and more U.S. birth mothers choose to place their infants with Canadian families. Issues of race, money and culture raise questions about
The Oregonian, U.S.A., GABRIELLE GLASER,  July 04, 2004
VANCOUVER, B.C. -- In every way, 11-year-old Gabriel Melcombe seems like a typical adolescent. He wears his hair in an impressive thatch and favors baggy jeans. He listens to hip-hop music. And, like others his age, he is struggling to carve out his identity.

But that search is made complicated by the fact that he is black, being raised by an adoptive white Canadian mother in this city founded by British fur traders.

Gabriel, with his soft brown eyes and ready smile, is the human face of international adoption -- and of a free market reality. At a time when the Western search for children stretches from China and Guatemala to Kazakhstan, Gabriel's birthplace may strike many as surprising: It is Philadelphia.

Americans pay as much as $35,000 to adopt white or Chinese infants. But many African American children like Gabriel have difficulty finding permanent U.S. families at any price. Since the early 1990s, several hundred have found homes -- with white parents -- in Canada.

The irony of one of the world's wealthiest nations exporting its own children has not gone unnoticed. For many, it raises questions about identity, race and the tangled legacy of American slavery.

ElectricAid in drive for reforms in Romanian orphanages

ElectricAid in drive for reforms in Romanian orphanages One of Romania's most notorious institutions, the grim "orphanage" at Negru Voda, has finally been closed, replaced by a new facility and a community-based programme for young adults with disabilities. The Negru Voda institution has been featured in previous EM reports on ElectricAid initiatives, and was also the subject of an awardwinning RTE documentary, Forgotten Children, Growing Older, produced by the Would You Believe team in 2003. ESB staff involvement with Negru Voda goes back to 1995, when the Trade Aid organisation, including many ESB staff among its ranks, began its efforts to provide basic sanitation and services for residents. At that time, there were only two working toilets for almost three hundred persons with moderate to severe disability, and the facility was a hellish scene of squalor and deprivation. It quickly became clear that Negru Voda was not simply an isolated instance, but a symptom of a much greater malaise in the entire system of care for the disabled in Romania. Tens of thousands of individuals all over the country were crammed into dilapidated buildings staffed by untrained and unmotivated personnel. A number of Trade Aid volunteers set up an organisation, Focus on Romania, and teamed with Cork-based social care specialists The Aurelia Trust to attack the problem, lobbying at every level in Romania and the European Union to secure reforms ahead of Romania's accession to the EU. Meanwhile, the Irish group devised a closure model for Negru Voda, incorporating international best practice, and proposed this as a pilot project that could be rolled out to reform all of Romania's institutions. Plans included community housing for those capable of semi-independent living, and specialised residential centres for those needing constant care. The project also included the establishment of a training curriculum for all levels of staff. At the end of May, Negru Voda finally closed its doors, and the new centre at Techirghiol was jointly opened by representatives of the Romanian government, John Mulligan of Focus on Romania and Brian Lenihan, Irish Minister for Children. The training programme for the community homes, devised by The Aurelia Trust and funded by ElectricAid, is now incorporated into the Romanian national curriculum, and is the very definition of "a gift that keeps on giving." As it is taught throughout Romania over the coming years it will have a huge effect in improving care standards nationally, as well as changing the mindset of thousands of institutional staff with regard to persons with disability. Meanwhile, Focus on Romania is now engaged in efforts to accelerate the rollout process. Plans are in place for a further ten community homes in the region, and sites are now being sought for this expansion. Other NGOs are also following the lead of the Irish group, and additional community homes are under development in other parts of the country, using the best practice standards set by the Irish project as their guide.

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WACAP's Russian Office

Published on: 6/30/2004 Last Visited: 8/25/2007

"The child's nationality is not of prime importance for potential parents, it's far more important to establish warm relations with the kid so that he would feel loved and cared for and there's no difference where he is from-India, China or Russia," told Michael Feltman, Chief Executive Officer for World Association for Children and Parents (WACAP), in an interview with the Vladivostok newspaper reporter during his three-day working visit to the city.

WACAP's representative office in Primorye was settled 10 years ago and developed strong cooperation with the regional official bodies in charge of adoption issues, Feltman said.

http://www.zoominfo.com/people/Feltman_L._376014014.aspx

Le conseiller du Premier ministre a été interpellé en compagnie d’une prostituée mineure Scandale à Matignon, le Monsieur commun

France - Le conseiller du Premier ministre a été interpellé en compagnie d’une prostituée mineure Scandale à Matignon, le Monsieur communication de Raffarin démissionne

le 24 avril 2004 à 00h00

Le Premier ministre Jean-Pierre Raffarin a mis fin hier aux fonctions de son conseiller en communication Dominique Ambiel, qui lui a présenté sa démission après avoir été interpellé en compagnie d’une prostituée de 17 ans. Dominique Ambiel, 49 ans, sera jugé le 7 juin devant le tribunal correctionnel de Paris pour avoir « sollicité, accepté ou obtenu des relations de nature sexuelle de la part d’un mineur qui se livre à la prostitution », délit passible de trois ans de prison et 45 000 euros d’amende au maximum, a-t-on appris de source judiciaire. Il est également poursuivi pour « outrage à personnes dépositaires de l’autorité publique », ayant apparemment adressé des propos assez vifs aux policiers qui l’ont interpellé. Cet ancien producteur de télévision était en poste à Matignon depuis mai 2002. Le Monde daté du 24 avril a révélé l’affaire hier matin. Peu après, dans un communiqué laconique, Matignon annonçait : « Le Premier ministre a mis fin aux fonctions de Dominique Ambiel, conseiller en communication, sur présentation de sa démission. » Le gouvernement et particulièrement le cabinet du ministre de la Justice Dominique Perben se sont refusés à tout commentaire. Le parquet de Paris a déclaré que le dossier avait été traité « comme pour tout citoyen ». C’est le procureur Yves Bot qui a décidé d’utiliser la procédure de convocation directe au tribunal, habituelle pour ce type de faits. Dominique Ambiel a été interpellé mardi vers 02h30 du matin dans le XVIIe arrondissement de Paris, alors qu’une prostituée roumaine de 17 ans se trouvait dans sa voiture, a confirmé le bureau du procureur. Un violent échange verbal l’a opposé aux policiers. Il leur aurait fait valoir son titre et aurait tenté de les intimider en leur demandant leurs numéros de matricule et en relevant le numéro de plaque d’immatriculation de leur voiture. Les policiers l’ont laissé partir pour emmener la jeune fille et l’interroger. Cette dernière leur a affirmé qu’elle avait eu avec Dominique Ambiel plusieurs rapports sexuels tarifés dans un hôtel les jours précédant l’interpellation. Le conseiller de Jean-Pierre Raffarin a été convoqué dans la journée de mardi, placé en garde à vue et confronté à la jeune prostituée. Il a démenti les accusations, livrant une version jugée toutefois « peu crédible » par les policiers. Selon lui, il faisait route vers Matignon pour récupérer un dossier important lorsque, arrêté à un feu rouge, la jeune femme s’est réfugiée dans sa voiture et lui a demandé de l’aide à la suite d’une bagarre avec d’autres prostituées. Il s’apprêtait à la déposer quelques centaines de mètres plus loin lorsque les policiers sont intervenus, a-t-il affirmé. Le 7 juin, Dominique Ambiel devra s’expliquer devant trois magistrats sur la base de la seule procédure policière, probablement en l’absence de la jeune Roumaine qui ne fait pas l’objet de poursuites mais d’un simple suivi social. Interrogé par Le Monde, il a parlé de « mensonge », de « diffamation », de « manipulation » et a rappelé que son départ de Matignon était déjà prévu. « Par égard pour le Premier ministre, j’ai décidé d’anticiper de quelques semaines mon départ prévu du cabinet afin de pouvoir m’exprimer en toute liberté sur les allégations malveillantes qui peuvent résulter de cet incident », a-t-il dit. Dominique Ambiel s’est d’ailleurs déclaré hier « abasourdi » et « atterré » par les accusations selon lesquelles il aurait eu recours aux services d’une prostituée de 17 ans. « Je vous le dis sur l’honneur : je n’ai jamais fréquenté de prostituées de ma vie, jamais ! Je suis atterré par des allégations aussi malveillantes. J’ai dit très exactement ce qui s’est passé ce soir-là et il ne s’agit en rien, en rien, de prostitution ». Inconnu du grand public, cet ex-responsable des Jeunes giscardiens s’est fait un nom dans le monde des médias en produisant entre 1987 et 2002 des émissions de télévision très populaires comme Fort-Boyard et Les aventuriers de Koh-Lanta. Une grande influence lui était prêtée à Matignon, où le Premier ministre s’appuyait sur ses conseils pour mettre au point ses célèbres formules et « vendre » ses projets à l’opinion. Les relations de Dominique Ambiel avec les médias se sont dégradées après ses interventions directes auprès de rédactions, auxquelles il reprochait les critiques adressées à Matignon à la suite de la canicule meurtrière de l’été 2003.

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The £18 babies

The £18 babies

By Gregory Katz

Published: June 18 2004 13:19 | Last Updated: June 18 2004 13:19

The infants of southern India havea price on their heads, with baby brokers

paying poor parents as little as 1,500 rupees for their children. The scandal

Picture Pres Conference Bucharest (Zambrenti, Clement, Castor - Phelim McAleer)

n 2004 Robak/Schneuman/Wetterberg had organised a meeting for US adoptive parents with their children at the US Embassy. Journalists Ann anMcAleer were there. They made them retract the press statement, saying the UNCRC was wrongly quoted.

The whole 'lobby' was there 

Zembrenti = Amici dei Bambini and MISA

Clement = works for Gaz de France, adopted from Romania (SN) - leader of the adoptive parents in France = AFAENER

Belinda Castor. A US nurse. She wrote openly about the corruption in 2000 on Romanian egroup = For the Children SOS (Linda Robak)

Translation: INternational Committee for the Coordination of ICA in Romania gave a press conference with the theme: Abandoned children in Romania have the right to grow up in a family, here or abroad: give them that Right.

Romania bans adoptions in other countries

Romania has banned the adoption of its children by families in other countries, except in very limited circumstances.

The vote by MPs to approve the bill passed by the upper house two months ago bows to the EU's demand that the lucrative trade in children should be stamped out, and defies pressure from the US for regulated foreign adoption.

The ban, which will take effect at the beginning of next year, replaces a moratorium on foreign adoptions imposed three years ago but widely ignored.

The US ambassador, Michael Guest, has been crusading for months to have the moratorium rescinded.

US Congress members have been piling on the pressure, US lobby groups have been seeking to influence the government, and would-be adoptive parents in the US have been advertising in the Romanian press, pleading to be granted the opportunity to adopt Romanian children.