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Argos: Adoption, market of corruption and happiness

Geplaatst op 5 oktober 2012 door Barbara Schreuders onder Afleveringen, Nieuws, Podcast, Politie en Justitie
Adoption is a possibility for parents to get a child. But adoption is also business and the adoption market is sensitive for corruption. Children are being stolen, money is paid. The biological parents who relinquish, often don’t understand what adoption means.
The last years the adoption industry moved to the African countries where it is easy to find young and healthy children. But also there people are being guilty of mal practices. Last Thursday Secretary of State Teeven prohibited adoptions from Uganda.
Why are there all the time new corruption scandals appearing in the adoption market? Are adoption agencies willing to hear about mal practices? Is monitoring of adoption procedures in faraway countries possible?
Argos about adoption, a market of corruption and happiness. Presentatie: Max van Weezel

Are you researching Serbian adoption - IFS

Saturday, October 6, 2012





Are you researching Serbian
adoption?





In the last six weeks I have
received several emails about four Serbian children who have been listed on the
Rainbow Kids
website.
Here's one listing in particular.


Although it doesn't say "Serbia" on it, if
you contact the agency International Family Services they will tell you the child is
in Serbia.

Photo listings of Serbia's waiting children is a violation of
Serbian law. It doesn't matter if you or I agree with the law, the fact is it's
not allowed.

These children are said to be "healthy", without any
identified special needs, with birth dates putting them at *just* over 12 months
old.  If you inquire about the children you'll be told they have all been
matched with families.  (healthy infants go fast, you know!)

You are
welcome to verify what I'm about to tell you by contacting the Serbian ministry
directly. Serbia ONLY allows children with special needs to be adopted
internationally.

What you will also get is IFS's information on their
country programs and fees. I think you will find this information quite
interesting. I know the Serbian Ministry of Labor and Social Policy adoption
unit along with officials at the US Embassy in Belgrade will find it interesting
as well.

Here is IFS's description of their program. I will break it into
chunks and insert my comments.



"SERBIA ADOPTION
PROGRAM DESCRIPTION

International Family
Services is excited to offer an international adoption program through the
country of
Serbia
.

One trip
is required, for approximately 16 days (in Belgrade), approximately 4-6
months after your completed paperwork is in Serbia. Adoptions through this
program are expected to be less costly than an adoption through Russia. The
staff in Serbia speak English and will be with you to help you through the
process."
This is very interesting. When doing a
Serbian adoption, through the Ministry of Labor and Social policy as you're
supposed to be, most families travel within a matter of WEEKS after their
paperwork is submitted in Serbia. With Asher I traveled within two weeks. Axel
was almost a month but only because that's the date we CHOSE.


"Un-related children can be adopted at the same
time."
This is absolutely untrue. Two
unrelated children cannot be adopted from Serbia at the same time. Serbia only
allows the adoption of one child at a time except in the case of sibling
groups.

This is one of my favorite parts, read it very carefully and see
if you can find the discrepancies. Oh wait, I'll highlight them for
you!:



At this time the IFS/partner Serbia adoption program is
going to be available to healthy, married couples only, but could change later.
Both parents go to meet the child but only one needs to stay for 3 weeks, while
the other can return home. The
parents must be at least 18 years older than the child, but no more than 45
years older than the adopted child.
Adoptive parents
must be 25-45 years old.
Ok wait a minute. The
parents must be at least 18 years older than the child, but the parents must
also be at least 25 years old. Let me think: 25 - 18  = 7. That would mean the
youngest child you could get out of Serbia is 7 years old???? How can that BE
when they've just listed four 12 month old children???????

Ok, here is
more, most of which is copied directly from the US State Department website:

Prospective adoptive parents will
be disqualified from adopting if they have been diagnosed with mental disorders
or infectious diseases. Adoptive parents with other serious health conditions
must demonstrate to the Ministry of Labor, Employment and Social Policy their
ability to raise the child. In most cases, Serbia will allow Americans to adopt only children with
physical or mental disabilities that are most effectively treated in the United
States. Children between the ages of two months and 18 years are eligible for
adoption. Please note that a child must be under the age of 16 in order to
qualify for a U.S. immigrant visa.

Did
you just read what I read???? IFS is claiming they have healthy children they're
willing to help you adopt, and yet in their own email they said Serbia will only
allow parents to adopt children who have physical or mental disabilities who are
better able to get help in the U.S. The only 'healthy' children coming out are
siblings to those already begin adopted who have special needs.
And more

A foreign citizen may adopt a child in Serbia only after
the child has been registered for adoption for at least one year and no domestic
adopters have been found.
If prospective adoptive parents have
located a child prior to their arrival in Serbia, the whole process may be
finished within four weeks.
Ok, let me explain this
to you. A child must be on the domestic registry for one full year before they
are able to able to be added to the international registry and must have been
rejected by at least three domestic (Serbian) families before they can be added
to the international registry. Do the math...you're not going to get a "healthy"
12 or 14 month old child out of the country legally.


For all
the information they copied directly from the Department of State website, they
forgot to include this (which I have taken directly from the Department of State
website!)


Currently there are no adoption agencies operating
in Serbia.  Prospective adoptive parents must work directly with the Ministry of
Labor, Employment and Social Policy
In a recent
email from the Ministry of Labor and Social Policy I was told there is
only one agency who has made an attempt to get approval to conduct adoptions

in Serbia but they have not yet moved forward to conduct any adoptions.
International Family Services was not on this list of ONE.

Now
lets talk about money, shall we? I find this to be quite
interesting.

Here is what I paid during Axel's adoption in December 2010
with the corrupt facilitator who is now facing an upcoming trial for several
counts of criminal activity:

Hometudy App. Fee: $150
Background check:
$210
Fingerprints: $50
Birth certificates: $150
USCIS fingerprints:
$830
Homestudy: $2400
Passport: $123
Apostille: $50
Reece's Rainbow
commitment fee: $210
About A Child agency Fee: $2000
FEDex:
$100
Translation Fee: $900
Airfare: $1700
Ticket Change Fee:
$463
Facilitation Fee: $6500
Hotel: $1028
Visa/passport:
$500
Medical: $100
Food/expenses: $1000
Total: $18,529

Exactly one year later,
December 2011, the corrupt facilitator no longer in the picture, I completed
Asher's adoption. This was working directly with the Serbian ministry as people
were supposed to have been doing (this adoption I needed only to update my home
study not start from scratch).

Homestudy update: $1900
Airfare TO:
$500
Translation: $750
Medical: $100
Birth certificate:
$60
Passport: $100
Visa: $404
USCIS: $720
Airfare Home: (1 adult, 1
child) $1000
Lodging (25 euro/night x 20 nights): $670
Transportation and
daily per diem (15 euro/day x 20 days) $600
Food/Misc: $400
Total:
$7,194


Now, let me show you the fees that International Family
Services has quoted for their Serbian adoption program:










The adoption fees
for each child are:

$4,950 Agency
fee

$22,000 Foreign Fee
paid out as follows:

$10,000 Due at time of match
with a child
$7,000 Dossier
Fee
Due With Completed
Dossier (without I 171H)
Can
retain $1,000 of this fee to carry with you to Serbia
$5,000Due when travel date
is
scheduled

Did you add that up??? 



$26,950
This does not include your
homestudy, USCIS or other expenses required to become paper ready to
adopt.


So add in the fees according to where you
live. Home studies are more expensive is some parts of the country that others.
USCIS has recently been reduced. Also add your airfare and travel expenses. The
actual cost is significantly more than $26,950.



As I have always said, please feel free to
contact me privately and I will give you the contact information for the Serbian
ministry, where you can always verify whatever I have said and ask your own
questions. Although I usually respond to people right away, please know that
sometimes emails coming off this site sometimes go to my spam mailbox. I try to
scan it at least once a week so but don't always catch them.




3 comments:
















  1. This is a good post, but your math is
    wrong. They are breaking out the $22,000 by explaining when each part is due. So
    it's really $22,000 + $4950 (from how I am reading it) which still seems
    incredibly high. Agencies like About a Child advertise a Serbia program too. I
    can't find their fees readily on their site, so I have no clue, but hopefully
    they are more competitive than this! It doesn't surprise me that people
    advertise children with SN as without them...but it's definitely not
    ethical!

    ReplyDelete







  2. The general message is well taken. Just 2
    comments on the math:

    1. If a parent is at least 25 years old and at
    least 18 years older than the child, that does not imply a minimum child's age
    of 7.
    (x>25) - (y>18) could be anything at all. For example, if
    x=26,y=26, then x-y = 0. Or, if x=40, y=22, then x-y=18

    2. In the
    breakdown of IFS's fees, you counted the $22K twice. They list $4950 agency fee
    and $22K country fees, and then break down the $22K. That is an explanation, not
    additional fees! So the total is only (!) $26,950. Still outrageously more than
    what the actual costs are.

    Sorry to be pedantic, but I am a math
    teacher....

    You don't have to print this, but I do suggest you update the
    post to avoid damaging your credibility.

    ReplyDelete







  3. Thank you both for correcting my math.
    You're right, I had read the statement of fees incorrectly, which I have
    corrected. Jennifer, my first adoption was through About A Child. I paid them
    $2000. It was a 100% unnecessary $2000 that was literally wasted. I prepared my
    own dossier (with the exception of the homestudy, the dossier took me only days
    to put together) and sent everything myself. I emailed directly with the
    facilitator. I kept asking AAC what that $2000 was for and was told "a receipt
    when you're done." I'll leave it at that. It is not necessary to use an adoption
    agency to adopt from Serbia. You need to use a licensed agency to do your
    homestudy and that's it.

Parliamentary committee enquires into international child adoptions

Parliamentary committee enquires into international child adoptions

5 Oct 2012Flash News

Members of the parliamentary human rights’ committee say that the time has come to draw criminal responsibility in cases of international and so-called forced adoptions of children from Slovakia. They made the comments in connection with an MPs' inquiry into the work of the Centre for International Legal Protection of Children and Youth.

Opposition Freedom and Solidarity (SaS) MP Lucia Nicholsonová said, as quoted by the SITA newswire, that more than 100 cross-border adoptions of children from Slovak orphanages took place without the supervision of the commission responsible for pairing children with suitable parents. A meeting of the parliamentary committee on Thursday, October 4, was also attended by the current director of the centre, Andrea Císarová, who said that an audit, begun on the instructions of the labour minister, has started at the centre to look at international adoptions.

Nicholsonová said that after more and more parents contacted her she decided to look into information from 357 files on international children adoptions. She said that the largest number of children adopted from Slovakia end up in Italy, which is the only country that is represented by a private company in international adoptions of children from Slovakia. According to her, the disproportionate transfer of children to Italy has been going on for at least ten years. In this matter, Nicholsonová has filed a criminal motion alleging children trafficking, and said she plans to turn to Interpol and the Italian police. Nicholsonová says there have been 106 cases when children went abroad without the commission's involvement and without documenting of their problematic health conditions. Another serious problem is the archive of the centre, which she said is lacking files related to international adoptions before 2002, SITA wrote. This means that it is not currently possible to get an overview of transfers of children from 1993 to 2002.

Agency Blamed for Pakistan Adoption Failure

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(CN) - Pakistan authorities charged an American with child trafficking because her Michigan adoption agency failed to fully investigate its partner program, she claims in court.

Nancy Baney says that she contacted Lighthouse Adoptions in October 2008 about adopting a child from Russia. After experiencing significant delays, however, Lighthouse president Lorien Wenger allegedly "recommended a new country program for the adoption of children from Pakistan."

Nightlight accredited in Romania

Romania Adoption Program

In October, 2012, Nightlight Christian Adoptions acheived accredidation to process adoptions of children from Romania. For the last decade, children in Romania could only hope for adoption, because Romania prohibited adoption to foreign countries. But now, Romanian adoption has became a real possibility for families where at least one adoptive parent is a Romanian citizen. Romanian adoption is a wonderful option in international adoption. The fees for a Romania adoption are reasonable and children three years of age and older are available. To learn more about the Romania Adoption Program, click the title above.

Romania Adoption Program

Nightlight proudly announces the launch of its Romania adoption program.

“You and I are Romanian citizens, and we have heard of the thousands of children living as orphans in our native country.

Mexico Authorities Unravel Child Trafficking Ring

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Life seemed to give Karla Zepeda a break when a woman came to her dusty neighborhood of cinderblock homes and dirt roads looking for babies to photograph in an anti-abortion ad campaign.

MISA followers seek to Arad: a former instructor talks about prostitution and porn

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Movement for Spiritual Integration into the Absolute, led by controversial Gabriel Grieg held today at the House of Culture, a conference opening yoga class, year I. That, under these yoga classes will be held in municipality, every Friday at 19.

Adoption Decision Court Netherlands: Erkenning van een buitenlands (Ethiopie) gegeven adoptie.

LJN: BY0848, Rechtbank Maastricht , 172944 / FA RK 12-760 Print uitspraak

Datum uitspraak: 25-09-2012

Datum publicatie: 23-10-2012

Rechtsgebied: Personen-en familierecht

Soort procedure: Eerste aanleg - enkelvoudig

Australia: End of the line for Ethiopian adoptions

End of the line for Ethiopian adoptions

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Australians hoping to form a family by adopting children from Ethiopia say they are devastated and baffled by the government’s recent decision to close its adoption program with the Horn of Africa country.

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