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Orphan scandal prompts scrutiny, action by Kyrgyz authorities

Orphan scandal prompts scrutiny, action by Kyrgyz  authorities

 

BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan — Kyrgyz lawmakers are  considering stricter regulation of international adoptions after officials have  been accused of “selling” orphans as thousands of children languish in poorly  funded state-run orphanages.

Stricter rules are expected to further slow Kyrgyzstan’s international adoption process,  which already has been hobbled by the recent license suspension of all  international adoption agencies working in the country amid an ongoing bribery  investigation.

In September, Ravshan Sabirov, head of  the Ministry of Social  Development, which oversees adoptions, and his deputy — Gulnara Derbisheva — were arrested and charged with taking tens of thousands of dollars worth of  bribes from adoption agencies.

What’s more, Kyrgyzstan’s international  adoptions had been halted from 2009 to 2011 following reports of orphanages  falsifying certificates of illness and disability in order to expedite adoptions — accusations that still plague the system.

“Strict rules must be set down,” says lawmaker Erkin  Sakebayev. “Then, of course, we can give Kyrgyz kids up for adoption to  foreigners. It’s better that a poor child live abroad and find happiness and  normal parents than stay in our orphanages, where the conditions are  terrible.”

According to the Ministry  of Social Development, 11,000 children reside in state-run homes, which  officials say are underfunded and poorly run.

As many as 80 percent of the children are “social orphans” who have one or  both parents living but unable or unwilling to care for them, according to the  Integrated Regional Information Networks, a service of the U.N.  Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

“Today, a child has become a commodity, and there is no one to protect his  interests,” says Chinar Kozhobekova, a  former orphanage employee who specializes in children with health issues.

“Government agencies assigned to supporting families and children misreport  mothers as alcoholics, or as dysfunctional families,” Mr.  Kozhobekova said. “Orphanages are ready to give children up for adoption in  exchange for financial support for the institution.”

Particularly difficult to place are children with disabilities.

“Here in Kyrgyzstan, people don’t like to  adopt unwell children,” says lawmaker Shirin  Aitmatova. “Sadly, those ill children can’t find parents.  The best-case  scenario is when a child is handicapped and [nurses] wipe kids’ butts and put on  dry pants.

“But with a single nurse on a tiny salary looking after 50 kids [in these  homes], they have no stimulation that could help them overcome their  disabilities,” she says.

“We can’t leave them there as they will rot there — it’s sin,” Ms.  Aitmatova says. “But it is also sin to sell them like goods.”

Activists say more should be done to keep children with their families before  of sending them to live in far-flung corners of the world.

“First, the state must just take all steps to house a kid in his or her  family surrounding, to be brought up in their biological environment by blood  relatives,” said Nazgul Turdubekova of Defenders of Children’s Rights. “And only  if there is no such surrounding should a child be put up for adoption.”

Edil Baisalov, who has taken over as  acting head of the Ministry of  Social Development since Mr.  Sabirov’s arrest, says the top priority is to find adoptive families in Kyrgyzstan but that is not easy, particularly in  the case of children with illnesses and disabilities.

“[Illness] is the most likely reason that biological parents bring their  children to state orphanages,” he says. “We are not going to avoid our duty to  those kids. We can’t let them grow up and be a burden on our society either as  these kids in car often end up being institutionalized or in prison while  suffering throughout their lives.”

Mr. Baisalov insists that everything is  being done to restart the adoption process. He hopes that new legislation aimed  at closing loopholes that allowed corruption will be in pace by mid-December,  and aims to see the number of international adoption agencies working in the  country increase from 10 to 15.

But observers bemoan an atmosphere of paranoia in which accusations of “selling” Kyrgyz children have been aggravated by Russian TV reports in Kyrgyzstan  documenting cases of Russian children suffering abuse at the hands of adoptive  parents in the U.S.

Meanwhile, three of 65 children set for adoption by Americans and Canadians  have died since 2009, as officials wrangle over the shifting bureaucracy.

“No child should wait days, months, years for family, love, caring,” says  Elena Voronina, a human rights activist in Bishkek. “While state officials  decide who should deal with international adoption, how to avoid corruption and  what mechanisms should be in place, 36 [of the remaining 62 children] are in  need of complex operations, which they will not receive in our country. Are they  doomed to a slow death?”

Read more: Orphan scandal prompts scrutiny, action by Kyrgyz authorities - Washington Times http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/nov/16/orphan-scandal-prompts-scrutiny-action-by-kyrgyz-a/#ixzz2CQQQoty6

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Zeci de fotografii cu minori de la un centru de placament, pe FACEBOOK

Zeci de fotografii cu minori de la un centru de plasament, pe FACEBOOK.
Poli?ia a demarat o anchet?



Poli?i?tii au început o anchet? la centrul de plasament SERA din municipiul
C?l?ra?i dup? ce zeci de fotografii ?i filmule?e cu copii institu?ionaliza?i,
între ace?tia ?i minori de la unitatea în cauz?, au ap?rut pe un site de
socializare.



18 1
0







Zeci de fotografii au fost postate pe Facebook


Zeci de fotografii au fost postate pe Facebook / FOTO:
http://adelastan.blogspot.ro



Potrivit reprezentan?ilor Poli?iei C?l?ra?i, din primele date reiese c? în
imaginile postate pe un site de socializare apar mai mul?i copii
institu?ionaliza?i, printre ace?tia ?i minori de la centrul de plasament SERA,
care particip? la petreceri, pe mese observându-se, la un moment dat, b?uturi
alcoolice ?i ?ig?ri.


"Conducerea institu?iei a dispus Serviciului de Investiga?ii Criminale
C?l?ra?i efectuarea de verific?ri. Ancheta este în acest moment în desf??urare,
vom putea prezenta concluziile la finalizarea cercet?rilor", a declarat
purt?torul de cuvânt al Poli?iei Jude?ene C?l?ra?i, inspector Ramona Tudor.


Fotografiile ?i filmule?ele cu minori institu?ionaliza?i sunt postate pe
Facebook, iar poli?i?tii încearc? acum s? stabileasc? persoanele care le-au
realizat, primele indicii ar?tând c? o parte dintre ele au fost f?cute în
cl?direa centrului de plasament SERA din C?l?ra?i.


"Nu pot s? va spun în acest moment mai multe decât ?tiu ?i eu. A fost dispus?
o anchet?, a?tept?m s? vedem rezultatele, unde au fost f?cute pozele ?i
filmule?ele, apoi putem s? dispunem m?suri", a declarat directorul Centrului de
Plasament SERA din C?l?ra?i, Mariana Savu.


Reprezentan?ii Prefecturii ?i ai Consiliului Jude?ean C?l?ra?i s-au
autosesizat în acest caz, iar autorit??ile spun c? în unele fotografii au
recunoscut salaria?i ai centrului.


"Nu putem fi de acord ca minorii institu?ionaliza?i s? apar? pe re?ele de
socializare, au fost începute verific?ri, iar cei vinova?i vor r?spunde conform
legii", a declarat prefectul jude?ului C?l?ra?i, George
Iacob.



Citeste mai mult pe REALITATEA.NET: http://www.realitatea.net/zeci-de-fotografii-cu-minori-de-la-un-centru-de-plasament-pe-facebook-politia-a-demarat-o-ancheta_1053469.html#ixzz2CadQuMR6

Conditions in Romanian orphanages remain an issue

Conditions in Romanian orphanages remain an issue

20 years on, John Mulligan is hoping that a song about their plight can help to raise awareness of a problem that never went away.

Nov 14th 2012, 6:45 AM 4,668 Views 14 Comments Share19 Tweet13 Email18

Image: YouTube screengrab

“WE’RE NOT EVEN looking for money so much. If we get some it’s great, but we are more interested in raising awareness.”

Polizei sprengt Menschenhändlerring in Kairo

12.11.2012

Kinderverkauf im Krankenhaus

Polizei sprengt Menschenhändlerring in Kairo

Fast 300 Kinder sollen ägyptische Menschenhändler für je 570 Dollar verkauft haben. Jetzt kam ihnen die Polizei in Kairo auf die Schliche. Das Netzwerk soll seit Jahren Neugeborene in einem Krankenhaus verkauft haben.

Kairo - Wie ein Sprecher der Polizei am Sonntag mitteilte, sei es gelungen, fünf tatverdächtige Menschenhändler festzunehmen - darunter zwei Krankenschwestern und ein Arzt, die in einem Krankenhaus in Kairo tätig sind. In der Klinik sollen in den vergangenen drei Jahren Kinder verkauft worden sein. Die Menschenhändler hätten demzufolge Kaiserschnitte an Frauen durchgeführt, deren Schwangerschaft für eine Abtreibung zu weit fortgeschritten war - unter der Prämisse, dass die Neugeborenen verkauft werden dürften.

Orphanages French scarred parents their children

Orphanages French scarred parents their children

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Egypt 'baby trafficking ring' broken up in Cairo

Egypt 'baby trafficking ring' broken up in Cairo

Continue reading the main story

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A child-trafficking ring that sold 300 babies over three years has been broken up in Cairo, Egyptian police say.

Two nurses and a doctor at a Cairo hospital are among five people arrested and police say they are still searching for the hospital manager.

Erkenning met oog op omzeiling van adoptieregels is strijdig met openbare orde

Erkenning met oog op omzeiling van adoptieregels is strijdig met openbare orde

CB 2012-209 Geplaatst op 6 november 2012 door Marijse Neuteboom-Klink

HR 2 november 2012, LJN BX6962

Een door een gehuwde Nederlandse man buitenslands verrichte erkenning, waarmee wordt beoogd de regelgeving op het gebied van de interlandelijke adoptie te omzeilen, is kennelijk in strijd met de openbare orde, ook al staat niet vast dat de man naar Nederlands recht onbevoegd was tot erkenning.

De feiten

International adoption. Neck or nothing

International adoption. Neck or nothing
01/11-2012 08:33, Bishkek – 24.kg news agency , by Makhinur NIYAZOVA
Court is to deliver judgment for ex-minister of Social Development of Kyrgyzstan Ravshan Sabirov in a day or two. The trial didn’t last long, however, there were no sensational revelations, as expected, and disclosure of corrupt schemes in international adoption.
Pick me!
The whole so-called international adoption scheme was based on stale and downright extortion of money from international organizations. This is confirmed by testimony of the defendants, former and current employees of the agency, who spoke at the trial as witnesses.
Each organization depended not only on a special commission, which included representatives of various ministries, departments and even law enforcement agencies but also civil activists. But it was the Minister of Social Development who made final decisions on issue of accreditation certificates for one or another organization. The document was invalid without his signature. And the created Corruption Control Commission lacked effective leverage, its conclusions were only advisory.
Over 20 foreign associations and organizations claimed adoption certificates. But there were 10 vacancies only. And the one, who paid more than others, win the competition. Moreover, the money was paid to a high-ranking official, but not to the public treasury.
The ministry’s criminal scheme was disclosed by Anti-corruption Service (ACS), according to which the high-ranking officials of the special ministry got $15 - 20 thousand per certificate.
Who are all those people?
It took long to solve this corrupt tangle of international adoption. Unraveling started with arrest of Minister’s assistant secretary Takhir Mirzahkmedov for taking a bribe from Italian organization on international adoption. Right hand of the Social Development Minister sold his boss at the first interrogation, saying that the money from the representative of "In Cammino Per La Famiglia – Onlus" he extorted by order of Ravshan Sabirov. Soon the officers arrested the Minister himself.
The investigative agency also arrested the presumably key organizer and inspirer of the criminal business, Gulnara Derbisheva, former Deputy Minister, and current Director of Social Security Department under the Ministry of Social Development.
The public expected a number of arrests. Two or three people would scarcely pull off the deal, would they? It’s no secret that a whole team was involved in it.
Investigation of Derbisheva’s case is not over yet. Will the secret services find all corruption links? Or is the Minister and his former assistant have to answer for all?
Haste makes waste
However, the criminal case, hastily initiated and taken to court, played low-down trick with the investigation. The Anti-Corruption Service didn’t go deep into the case (maybe it didn’t want to?) and made an array of gaps, that only benefit smart lawyers.
The main intrigue of Sabirov’s case was sudden disappearance of the aggrieved party, Alexander Angelidi, representative of L' Airone Onlus Association. After three days of his absence at court hearings, the public prosecutor suddenly told that Mr. Angelidi “had passed away in Russia” on September 24, 2012. “No documentary proofs of it have come yet,” the prosecutor said and still hasn’t presented any evidences.
Attorney believes that the investigation hides location of the aggrieved. “The information about his death is wrong. According to our information, he is alive and is either in Kyrgyzstan or in Russia,” Mr. Sabirov’s attorney Ikramidin Aitkulov said.
Besides, the attorney found out that Alexander Angelidi had never been representative of L'Airone Onlus Association, and the attorney allegedly has evidence of it. “I found the company’s office and got written reply that Angelidi has never been their representative. It turns out that he deluded the investigation,” he says.
Angelidi’s evidences say that he gave Mr. Sabirov’s assistant $40 thousand in total. “Takhir Mirzakhmedov said we wouldn’t get any certificate until we resolve humanitarian aid issue,” the prosecutor read Angelidi’s evidences in court.
Who is the whitest here?
It’s no secret that Kyrgyz children are taken abroad violating all imaginable laws. There were several big international adoption scandals with Alexander Angelidi’s name in them.
It became known recently that some people tried to take healthy children away from a single mother for international adoption. The woman was forced to sign a refusal under alleged financial aid.
Mr. Sabirov’s attorney believes that “one doesn’t know what to expect from such international swindler as Angelidi”. The attorney intends to bring Angelidi, and also Guliayim Ismayilova, representative of In Cammino Per La Famiglia – Onlus Association (Italy), to court for false denunciation of his client. According to him, the latter blamed Sabirov in order to protect herself. “The case has materials, according to which criminal case against Ismayilova for bribery was closed”.
Ismayilova denies attorney’s information about charges, believing he is doing to defend his client. According to the witness, she also gave money to Sabirov through his assistant, Takhir Mirzakhmedov. The sssistant always claimed everything was agreed with the minister. And when I met Mr. Sabirov, he told me to solve everything with Takhir. When I was talking to the minister’s assistant, he told me a camera was filming us, and the boss could see and hear everything,” Guliayim Ismayilova told at trial.
Angelidi testified that the Minister ordered to solve everything through his assistant, and the latter extorted tens of thousands dollars from foreign organizations for allegedly humanitarian aid to orphans.
Camomile games
The defendant initially gave the same testimony. He admitted to extorting money by Sabirov’s order. However, in court (after information of Angelidi’s death came), Tahkhir began denying his testimonial. He said the attorney persuaded him to shift the blame on to the boss, so that he would be “dropped charges and relleased on parole”.
Extortion and bribery facts were also denied by the defendant: he said it was not bribe at all, but a “reward for my assistance” given voluntarily by the foreign organization’s representatives. “I spent them on my personal needs. I wanted to raise money illegally”, Takhir Mirzakhmedov said at the trial.
During next hearing, the defendant began claiming that officers made him give testimonials. However, GKNB denies his words. The investigative agency said it has video record of Takhir Mirzakhmedov’s interrogation, where he is confessing criminal action in collusion.
Bets accepted
The public prosecution asked the court to find Ravshan Sabirov and Takhir Mirzakhmedov guilty, and sentence them to 15 and 14 years in a strict regime penal colony with confiscation of property. And Mr. Sabirov was lucky: extortion of a large scales bribe by a public official stipulates for 20 years in prison.
The defendants’ advocacy considers the prosecutor’s arguments as groundless. Attorney Ikramidin Aitkulov believes that court must acquit his client. “No evidence of Sabirov’s guilt has been brought to court. It’s a gallery play. The public prosecution asks for 15 years, though it has not brought any evidences. The whole case is based on Takhir Mirzakhmedov’s testimonial, who denied his own words at trial, claiming he was made to do so,” he noted.
The attorney said no witness has testified against Ravshan Sabirov. And Derbisheva’s arrest justifies Mr. Sabirov. “She was arrested while returning bribe to organization’s representative, because she failed to accredit it as Sabirov rejected to sign the association’s certificate. Isn’t it a direct proof that Ravshan Sabirov fought against corruption in the Ministry?” Ikramidin Aitkulov believes.
Fates of hundreds of orphans depend on the trial’s outcome, which, unfortunately, didn’t end sensationally. Whom will Themis believe?

Sele Enat moved to Layla facility

OPPORTUNITY HOUSE

In March 2007 AAI opened Opportunity House (OH), a home designed to serve children with special needs in Addis Ababa. Start-up costs were provided by a generous grant from the Margaret T. Biddle Foundation. Three years later, in 2010, OH was officially sanctioned by the Ethiopian government as a model program improving the holistic well-being of children with developmental disabilities.

The dozen or so children living at Opportunity House have a variety of disabilities including autism, blindness, deafness, and developmental delays. AAI also partners with nearby orphanages to care for several children with similar issues. Many of the children referred to the OH program have families who are unable to assist with the challenging daily needs of their child. These children are not eligible for adoption. The ultimate goal is for children to be reunited with their birth families. In 2011-2012 several children did indeed go home to improved lives with their families!

Treatment is highly individualized and designed to help each child reach his/her maximum developmental potential. Caring professionals provide speech, physical, and occupational therapy, as well as training for the staff and families responsible for the ultimate care of the child. Slowly but surely the stigma surrounding special needs is giving way to empathy and appropriate educational and therapeutic programs.

We have seen evidence of great progress! Children who were silent have begun to speak; those who were immobilized are sitting and walking with the help of intensive therapy; and all are learning to interact with others and communicate their needs appropriately.

HAS PRESIDENT JAMMEH SACRIFICED SOS BABY ADOPTED BY THE FIRST LADY AS A RITUAL?

HAS PRESIDENT JAMMEH SACRIFICED SOS BABY ADOPTED BY THE FIRST LADY AS A RITUAL?

HAS PRESIDENT JAMMEH SACRIFICED SOS BABY ADOPTED BY THE FIRST LADY AS A RITUAL?
 
A newly born Gambian baby, who was dumped by her mum immediately after labor, and was “adopted” by Gambia’s First Lady Zeinab Suma Jammeh back in 2000, has disappeared—amid speculations that the dictator might have allegedly sacrificed the girl as a ritual. The baby was being taken care of by a foster parent at the Bakoteh Children’s village, where the First Lady offered to adopt the baby as her parent. At the time, her daughter baby Mariam Jammeh needed a company, and she thought that the best way to keep her child entertained was to become a foster parent.
Zeinab left the State House under the company of  Fatou Jahoumpa Ceesay, Nyimasata Sanneh Bojang, and a handful of her protocol staff to the Children’s village to ask the SOS management to help allow her adopt the abandoned new born baby. Management agreed, and she later showed up with a pregnant goat, bag of rice, cooking oil and Cola-nut to christen the baby.
The SOS staff, including the foster parents at the SOS  threw a party for the child. The baby was named after the President’s wife Zeinab Souma Jammeh. The goat that was brought by Zeinab died, when a heavy storm hit the SOS village, a source said.
Fatou Jahoumpa Ceesay, and Nyimasata Sanneh Bojang played a crucial role towards the baby’s adoption. Nyimasata used to work with the SOS as a Social case worker prior to joining the Jammeh regime. She was very familiar with the SOS.
The First Lady came to pick up the child a month after the naming ceremony. She told the girl’s foster parent that she was going to take her to the State House to keep her daughter accompany. This tells you that Jammeh has no family in the Gambia to interact with his daughter. They had to adopt an abandoned child to keep baby Mariam accompany. There is nothing wrong with Zeinab adopting an abandoned kid, but the circumstances surrounding the child adoption raises a red flag. There was no legal paperwork signed to account for the adopted child.
For eleven solid years, the SOS adopted child is nowhere to be seen around Zeinab’s kids. The baby was last seen by the SOS management when Zeinab, FJC and Nyimasata Sanneh Bojang came to adopt her.
Concerned parties approached the Freedom Newspaper asking for help to locate the adopted SOS girl. The parties concerned said they were present when the First Lady was accompanied by Fatou Jahoumpa Ceesay, and Nyimasata Sanneh Bojang asking the SOS Management for the baby to be adopted by Zeinab.
During our investigations, we interviewed numerous sources within the Jammeh State House. One insider said he was aware of the child adoption. The insider said after adopting the child, the First Lady decided to give the baby to her aunty one Hadija. Hadija raised Zeinab when she was poor child.  She has not been blessed with a child in her lifetime, the insider said.
According to the State House insider, the baby was never hosted at the State House, contrary to Zeinab’s initial impression that she was going to raise her with Mariam. The baby was staying with Hadija at a property within the Greater Banjul Area, the insider tells the Freedom Newspaper. He said Hadija will occasionally bring the baby to the State House to interact with baby Mariam.
“The baby later stopped coming to the State House. I don’t know where she is right now. I don’t know whether she is alive, or has been sacrificed by the President,” the insider said.
“ I do know for a fact that the President worships idols. He has “Jalangs” in Kanilai. One Faye Bojang has been assigned by Jammeh to pour alcohol on the “Jalangs” on every Thursday and Friday. This has been a routine practice. Even whereas the President is away, Faye Bojang must pour alcohol on the Jallangs. The President worships idols,” the source said.