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Faux orphelins du Congo: "La faillite du système d'adoption francophone belge"

Thierry Fiorilli

Rédacteur en chef du Vif/L'Express

OPINION

12/05/18 à 11:29 - Mise à jour à 11:29

Du Le Vif/L'Express du 10/05/18

ADOPTIEBEDROG INDONESIË

Cheating Adoption Indonesia

Meeting April 22, 2018

Written by: D. Deijle

Posted on www.ojau.nl, 12 May 2018

On April 22, 2018, in collaboration with Stichting Mijn Roots and mw. Y. Veenendaal organized a meeting at the Indonesian Embassy, ??following the broadcast of Zembla, "Adoption cheating part 3", where we were all in. It was a meeting for adopted people from Indonesia and their adoptive parents because there was a need for it. Although this day was organized in the short term, there was a lot of interest.

A fake pregnancy, and the online sale of a baby: Shocking trafficking case in Chennai

The Chennai police busted a child trafficking racket that had spread its web from Uttar Pradesh to the city, on Monday. The criminal activity came to light and was investigated after Yogesh Kumar, a Madras High Court advocate trainee, filed a case at the Kilpauk police station over suspicions that his wife had illegally procured a newborn baby.

Yogesh and Padmini got married in February 2016 and just one month later his wife allegedly claimed to be pregnant. According to the police she had a condition which made it difficult for her to conceive a child and thus she faked a pregnancy.

"She seems to have had a problem conceiving and decided to adopt a child without the knowledge of her in-laws," says C Shyamala Devi, the DCP who led a special team to nab the child-trafficking group. "Once she was in her parents' home, she went online and posted that she was looking for a child on a website where people buy and sell other goods. That is how a broker found her and “sold” the baby girl," she explains.

On January 11, 2017, Padmini told her husband that she had given birth to a girl at the Government Hospital for Women and Children in Egmore. But before her husband could reach the hospital from the court, she came back to her parents' residence with the baby. Following this, Kumar filed a petition at the Madras High Court, which directed the child trafficking unit of the city police to probe the matter.

When investigations began, it soon came to light, that the child had been trafficked from a family in Ghaziabad, Uttar Pradesh. Jeya Sharma (39) and Amit Sharma (42) gave birth to a third child in January 2017 and wanted to sell the baby since they could not take care of the baby.

A fake pregnancy, and the online sale of a baby: Shocking trafficking case in Chennai

The Chennai police busted a child trafficking racket that had spread its web from Uttar Pradesh to the city, on Monday. The criminal activity came to light and was investigated after Yogesh Kumar, a Madras High Court advocate trainee, filed a case at the Kilpauk police station over suspicions that his wife had illegally procured a newborn baby.

Yogesh and Padmini got married in February 2016 and just one month later his wife allegedly claimed to be pregnant. According to the police she had a condition which made it difficult for her to conceive a child and thus she faked a pregnancy.

"She seems to have had a problem conceiving and decided to adopt a child without the knowledge of her in-laws," says C Shyamala Devi, the DCP who led a special team to nab the child-trafficking group. "Once she was in her parents' home, she went online and posted that she was looking for a child on a website where people buy and sell other goods. That is how a broker found her and “sold” the baby girl," she explains.

On January 11, 2017, Padmini told her husband that she had given birth to a girl at the Government Hospital for Women and Children in Egmore. But before her husband could reach the hospital from the court, she came back to her parents' residence with the baby. Following this, Kumar filed a petition at the Madras High Court, which directed the child trafficking unit of the city police to probe the matter.

When investigations began, it soon came to light, that the child had been trafficked from a family in Ghaziabad, Uttar Pradesh. Jeya Sharma (39) and Amit Sharma (42) gave birth to a third child in January 2017 and wanted to sell the baby since they could not take care of the baby.

RP to Chairman: About Daniela Georghe and ARGOS

Roelie Post

Attachments15:16 (20 minutes ago)

to Tristan.BAUME

Persoonlijk en vertrouwelijk

Met uitdrukkelijk verzoek dit niet te delen met de leden van de Disciplinaire Board

Goldstein relinquished his accredition for intercountry adoption

U.S. Passports

International Travel

U.S. Visas

Intercountry Adoption

International Parental Child Abduction

Adoptiekinderen die kat de bel aanbonden blijven met wrang gevoel zitten bij onderzoek naar fraude

Adoption children who rang the bell remain puzzled when investigating fraud

After testimonials about fraud with adoptions from Ethiopia, the Minister of Welfare promises Jo Vandeurzen (CD&V) an investigation. Adinda Aelvoet and Priyani Libert remain with a wry feeling behind. "Because they are almost elections, our politicians are now in motion. Then we

came out with our adoption story a year and a half ago, nothing happened. " On Saturday, 17-year-old Thereza De Wannemaeker testified in Het Laatste Nieuws Denderleeuw about her fraudulent adoption from Ethiopia in 2009. According to the official her biological mother had disappeared and her father had died. Discovered later Thereza that none of that story was true.

In recent days, fifteen more testimonials have been received from the newspaper about suspected adoption fraud. Spin in the web is the adoption agency Ray of Hope (RoH), that from 1997 to 2017 cooperated with a completely unreliable Ethiopian according to the testimonials

contact. Flemish Member of Parliament Lorin Parys (N-VA) wants an extra session of even before the elections the Flemish Parliament about the possible fraudulent adoptions. He argues for a "profound." and independent research. " Jo Vandeurzen is also Flemish Minister for Welfare favors such a study of past adoption practices.

Michael S. Goldstein Esq. Accreditation Relinquishment

The Council on Accreditation (COA) reports that on May 2, 2018, Michael S. Goldstein, Esq., voluntarily relinquished his accreditation to provide intercountry adoption services.

Agencies or persons that are not accredited or approved may not act as a primary provider but may perform services for intercountry adoption under the supervision of an accredited or approved adoption service provider in accordance with the regulations. When an agency or person’s accreditation or approval expires or is relinquished, the agency or person is responsible for executing their plan for transferring cases and records as required by 22 CFR 96.33(e) and 96.42(d).

Families working with Michael S. Goldstein, Esq., should contact him directly with questions about case or record transfer. We also encourage families to review the information published by the Council on Accreditation about selecting a primary provider/adoption service provider and the accreditation/approval requirements.

The Department of State does not review or approve case transfer plans and has a limited role in their execution. The Department does, however, communicate with competent adoption authorities about the accreditation status of agencies and persons and case transfer plans, as needed.

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The life of a whistleblower: Roelie Post (ARGOS) + anonymous colleague

Adoption from abroad is increasingly being questioned. The research program Zembla recently paid attention to corruption in adoptions from Sri Lanka, and on television in April was the Dutch documentary drama 'Exportbaby', about corruption in adoptions from Uganda. Last year, the Council for Criminal Justice Application and Youth Protection advised to ban adoption from abroad.

One of the first to uncover corruption scandals was Roelie Post, an official at the European Commission in Brussels. In the late nineties she worked for the EC on the issue of children's rights in Romania. They had to be resolved before Romania's accession to the EU was possible.

Post was faced with opposition and threats that are so serious that she is now living in hiding in a village in the north of the Netherlands and that she has a long-standing conflict with her employer, the EC. It does not recognize her as a whistleblower and threatens with punitive measures.

Roelie Post tells her story in Argos.

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