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Romanian Senate Approves Law Allowing International Adoption By Romanian Citizens

Romanian Senate Approves Law Allowing International Adoption By Romanian Citizens

Romania's Senate on Tuesday adopted a law allowing a Romanian citizen residing abroad to adopt Romanian children.

Romanian Senate Approves Law Allowing International Adoption By Romanian Citizens

The Romanian citizen residing abroad can adopt the child only two years after the adoption procedure has been started, to allow the child to be adopted domestically or by a relative up to the fourth degree who lives abroad.

The law amends Law 273/2004 on adoption. It must now be approved by the Chamber of Deputies.

Ambassador post blocked as US adoptive families fight for release of Vietnamese orphans

Ambassador post blocked as US adoptive families fight for release of Vietnamese orphans

By: Margie Mason, The Associated Press

06/15/2011 4:17 AM | Comments: 0

In this June 3, 2011 photo, Marsha Sailors holds up a photo of herself and three-year-old Vietnamese girl, Claire, whom she and her husband are hoping to adopt in the room they prepared for the child in their Kansas City, Mo. home. Three birthdays have since passed, but the child has never slept in the room or worn the clothes hanging in the closet. After nine trips to see the girl Sailors and her husband named Claire, the couple are no longer even allowed to visit her. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

HANOI, Vietnam - Marsha Sailors painted the nursery pink and green at her Missouri home, put up princess pictures and built a crib for her new little girl. They hadn't yet met, but she already was in love with the smiling 6-month-old in a photo sent from Vietnam.

Three birthdays have since passed, but the child has never slept in the room or worn the clothes hanging in the closet.

Sailors and her husband visited the girl they named Claire a combined nine times in unsuccessful attempts to bring her home, and now are barred from any further contact.

Instead, Claire remains stuck inside a decaying Vietnamese orphanage along with 15 other kids who also have American families waiting to adopt them. Their cases went into bureaucratic limbo in 2008 when Washington suspended its adoption agreement with Vietnam over broad suspicions of fraud and baby selling.

"I just can't spend a lot of time in her room because it's just so sad," said Sailors, from Kansas City, who celebrated the past two Christmases at the orphanage in southern Bac Lieu province with her husband Chuck before authorities barred the visits in January.

"We're just longing to bring her home because otherwise her future ... I can't go very far down that road before my heart starts to break," she said.

Most of the adoptions already in the pipeline went forward under exceptions to the 2008 moratorium, but paperwork problems delayed the Bac Lieu cases. Vietnam now says it hopes to join the international Hague Convention on adoptions in October and that the pending cases must start over under those tighter rules, which bar prospective parents from even seeing the children until everything is finalized.

Some families blame the U.S. State Department for the hold up, arguing it has pressured Vietnam so hard to impose stricter regulations that their cases ended up getting stuck. They're now hoping for exemptions and have gained some leverage: Two U.S. senators have blocked President Barack Obama's pick for the new U.S. ambassador to Vietnam over the issue.

"If the Department of State can get a killer out of Pakistan, I think they can manage to get 16 unwanted orphans out of Vietnam," said Matthew Long of Merritt Island, Fla., referring to the U.S. mission that killed Osama bin Laden. He is waiting for the release of 4-year-old Ava. "They just need some help finding that will."

The orphanage is a two-room former prison deep in Vietnam's Mekong Delta. Couples had rotated visits there before January, each time taking food, milk, clothes and toys for the children who otherwise receive very little.

They brought video cameras to capture the moments and document the changes every parent yearns to see. With no shared language, they communicated using hugs and kisses.

Since then, photos sent by other visitors reveal that the children have lost weight.

Three Florida families have enlisted the help of Sen. Marco Rubio, who a placed hold on the ambassador nominee after Indiana Sen. Richard Lugar lifted a similar block. Rubio has concerns over the State Department's handling of the "long-delayed adoptions," said his spokesman Alex Burgos.

In 2007, 828 babies went home with American families, including actress Angelina Jolie's adoption of a 3-year-old boy. That was up from 163 the year before.

Washington ended the joint agreement in September 2008 after a spike in the number of abandoned babies, raising concerns about whether the children truly were voluntarily given up by their birth parents as U.S. law requires.

Months earlier, the U.S. Embassy in Vietnam reported evidence of fraud, bribery, kidnapping and outright baby-selling for adoptions that can cost more than $20,000. Washington had previously halted an agreement in 2003 over similar concerns, and resumed it three years later after safeguards were supposedly put in place.

After the 2008 suspension, most of the 534 cases already being processed were resolved and the children were allowed to leave. But officials put the brakes on Bac Lieu cases because irregularities were uncovered, including wrong birth mothers' names on paperwork, according to Keith Wallace, director of Families Thru International Adoption, the Indiana agency brokering the adoptions.

He said they reinvestigated most of the cases and fired a staffer who had taken "short cuts."

In one case, a baby who already was matched with an American family was returned to its birth mother because her financial situation had improved after she married, he said. In other cases, the agency obtained DNA samples and new paperwork from birth mothers stating they knowingly gave up their babies, Wallace added.

"Nobody doubts that these kids are orphans. Nobody," said Kelly Ensslin, a North Carolina lawyer representing two families. In 2008, she spent 10 weeks in Vietnam fighting to get her own adopted daughter out.

"It's full of so much drama, and it's sadly on the backs of these kids," she said.

Alison Dilworth, adoptions division head at the U.S. Office of Children's Issues, said Washington has pressed Vietnam's Communist government to release the children, but that officials there have refused to provide information on why they rejected the cases.

"We've made it very, very clear that we want them to move forward on these cases, and I can understand why the parents are absolutely frustrated," Dilworth said.

She denied that Washington's push for Vietnam to join the Hague Convention was to blame for the hold up, saying the adoption agency may have raised false hopes that these cases were still moving forward.

"I think they told a lot of their clients that it was the big, bad U.S. government that was stopping things, when in reality, we've never had a chance to even take a look at these cases," she said by phone from Washington.

Vietnam prohibited The Associated Press from travelling to the orphanage, and adoption officials in Bac Lieu province declined to comment.

In a written response to questions from the AP, Vietnam's Adoptions Department said all 16 cases are ineligible for processing under the old system and will go forward under the new Hague rules expected to be adopted Oct. 1. The toddlers will first be put up for adoption within Vietnam. If no one comes forward, they can then be paired with foreign families. A process that will take months, at best, if the American families are re-matched with the children.

But Marsha Sailors vows to never give up the fight. She said Claire, whose Vietnamese name is Yen, made a clear connection early on, telling mommy she loved her in her native tongue the first time they met.

She is desperate not to let the child she considers her own to be abandoned for a second time in her short life.

"I realize she doesn't yet understand fully the love between a mother and child, but to me, this interaction, at her own initiative, tells me that she understands the bond that we have," Sailors said. "And she knows that she is ours."

Couples sue adoption agency for "bait, switch" scheme

Couples sue adoption agency for "bait, switch" scheme

PHILADELPHIA | Wed Jun 15, 2011 5:05pm EDT

(Reuters) - Five couples claim an international adoption agency that promised each a baby from Guatemala scammed them in a "bait and switch" scheme and are suing under a federal law more often used against mobsters and drug dealers.

The lawsuit against Main Street Adoption Services, based in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, was filed under the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organization (RICO) statute.

The lawsuit, filed on behalf of five couples from Illinois, Minnesota and Louisiana, accuses the agency and three individuals of conspiring with one another "for the illegal purpose of committing fraudulent adoptions through a bait and switch scheme, an adoption scheme that offered illusory promises."

The prospective parents in 2007-2008 spent up to $25,000 each for adoptions that have not yet been completed, and may never be, the lawsuit said. The couples suffered humiliation, outrage, indignation, sleepless nights, and severe emotional distress, court documents said.

Neither the defendants nor their lawyer could be reached for comment on Wednesday. A lawyer for the couples declined comment.

In each case, the promise was that a young child was awaiting the couple in Guatemala. But in each case, things went wrong, even after the couples had traveled to Guatemala to meet the children.

In one such case, in 2007, a couple was assured that they would be meeting their new daughter, Madeline, at a hotel in Guatemala. By that point, they had paid $12,500.

Nobody showed up at the hotel with the child, and they received a call from the agency saying the birth mother had reclaimed Madeline 11 days before they arrived in Guatemala, the lawsuit said. They were "heartbroken, devastated and appalled," according to court papers.

The couple then quickly fell in love with a second child, the suit claimed. But eventually, that adoption also fell through. By then the couple had paid over $25,000.

The suit demands the adoption agency pay each couple triple the amount of their losses as well as cover court costs and damages of more than $75,000.

(Editing by Barbara Goldberg and Peter Bohan)

Ethiopian Adoption Update!!!

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2011

Ethiopian Adoption Update!!!

We just got an Update from our Adoption Agency!

We are pleased to announce that the Ethiopian Ministry of Women's Youth and Children's Affairs (MOWYCA) have decided to increase the number of files to be reviewed on a daily basis. As of June 15, 2011

the number of files

will increase

from five(5) files per day

to ten (10) files per day.

During the next two to three months the Ministry plans to

increase the number of files reviewed to

fifteen (15) files per day

as they complete the system improvement goals that they have previously outlined for themselves.



For anyone that doesn't know the details...

that's ok.

All you need to know is that

it's WONDERFUL news!

Answered pray!

Praising Him!

Opri?i exportul de copii!

Opri?i exportul de copii!

Senatul voteaz? mâine reluarea adop?iilor interna?ionale, deghizate în "adop?ii interne"
13 iunie 2011 – 13:01
 Foto: Karina Knapek / Jurnalul Na?ional 
ESENTIALCite?te avizul GuvernuluiCite?te Proiectul de Lege 250 pe 2011Cite?te raportul final al comisiilor

Ce-ar mai fi de vândut în România? P?durile le-am rezolvat, mun?ii îi întâlnim prin declara?iile de avere ale unora, terenurile agricole sunt cump?rate de str?inii ce-?i descoper? la noi pasiunea pentru agricultur?, fabricile ?i uzinele sunt mormane de fier vechi înghesuite în containerele din port, aurul e pe duc?, combinatele sunt date. Ce-a mai r?mas de vândut în România? O marf? dup? care str?inii tânjesc de ani de zile. Comercializat? en-detail, i-a îmbog??it în anii '90 pe negustorii pricepu?i. ONG-uri ?i case de avocatur?. Din ce s-ar mai putea face azi bani în România? Din copiii abandona?i. Guri de hr?nit, salarii de pl?tit asisten?ilor sociali ?i maternali, pagub?-n buget. Suflete-n plus pe harta României care e preg?tit? s?-?i exporte iar copiii.

"În sistemul de protec?ie social? din România sunt, în momentul de fa??, circa 67 000 – 70 000 de copii. Dintre ace?tia, circa 23 000 de copii sunt în centre de plasament, circa 21 000 de copii sunt în asisten?? maternal?, restul copiilor sunt în alte forme de plasament. (...) În momentul de fa?? ?i, de fapt, în ultimii cinci ani, num?rul de familii de români care vor s? adopte copii excede num?rului de copii adoptabili. Dac? num?rul de copii adoptabili este, undeva, la o medie de 1 100 – 1 200 de copii, num?rul de familii care doresc s? adopte copii, familii de români, este de circa 1 600 – 1 700 ?i, de foarte multe ori, aceste familii renun?? din cauza birocra?iei sau din cauza altor motive, dar interesul în România pentru adop?ia na?ional? este un interes major, care ne deosebe?te fa?? de alte state din Europa.” A?a î?i promova în plenul Senatului proiectul legislativ de modificare a Legii 273/2004 Bogdan Panait, secretar de stat la Oficiul Român pentru Adop?ii (ORA). În realitate, e o campanie de marketing, bine coordonat?, cu reportaje lacrimogene la televizor ?i imagini cu stadioane pline de copii ai nim?nui. Scopul proiectului legislativ e unul singur: reluarea adop?iilor interna?ionale! Cet???nii români sunt discrimina?i de lege, iar prevederile Constitu?iei sunt nesocotite, lucru care, într-adev?r, "ne deosebe?te fa?? de alte state din Europa”...

Protectul legislativ 250/2011 opereaz? 70 de modific?ri în legea privind regimul juridic al adop?iilor. Una singur? a fost scoas? la înaintare, în public: reducerea perioadei în care un copil poate fi declarat adoptabil (30 de zile de la eliberarea certificatului de na?tere în situa?ia copilului cu p?rin?i necunoscu?i – abandona?ii din maternit??i -, sau 1 an de la luarea m?surii de protec?ie în cazul copiilor care au p?rin?i, dar ace?tia sunt dezinteresa?i de ei). Familiile de români care vor s? înfieze s-ar putea declara fericite. Gre?it! De acum înainte, conform legii, vor concura pentru un copil adoptabil cot la cot cu cet??enii str?ni, la aceea?i categorie: "adop?ie intern?”. ?i asta în vreme ce cona?ionalii no?tri afla?i la munc? în str?in?tate vor aplica, dac? vor s? înfieze copii din România, la categoria "adop?ii interna?ionale”.

Ce nu s-a spus pân? acum despre PL 250/2011 este c? el modific? no?iunea de "adop?ie intern?”. Legea veche, înc? în vigoare, prevede c? adop?ia intern? e cea în care atât adoptatorul cât ?i adoptatul au domiciliul stabil în România. Legea nou?, care va fi votat? mâine de Senat, spune c? "adop?ia intern?” este cea "în care atât adoptatorul sau familia adoptatoare, cât ?i adoptatul au re?edin?? obi?nuit? în România”. Ce înseamn? "re?edin?? obi?nuit?”? PL 250/2011 introduce în lege un nou articol – art.3, ind (1) – cu urm?torul cuprins: "în sensul prezentei legi, prin re?edin?? obi?nuit? în România a adoptatorului/ familiei adoptatoare se în?elege situa?ia: a) cet??enilor români cu domiciliu în România (...)” dar ?i, aten?ie! "b) cet??enilor statelor membre UE/SEE sau str?inilor care au drept de reziden?? permanent? sau dup? caz, drept de ?edere permanent? pe teritoriul României”.

The woman who sold children

The woman who sold children

Published: June 9, 2011

The author is a Lincoln’s Inn barrister practicing in Islamabad and holds a degree in Economics and Literature from Bryn Mawr College, US

On June 2, the Pakistani police, in an increasingly rare display of efficiency, arrested Fatima, an Afghanistan-qualified lady doctor working for a private hospital in Peshawar, after she attempted to sell a five-month-old baby boy to an undercover policewoman. What was perhaps even more shocking than the incident itself was the fact that, according to the police, not only had Fatima sold several other infants, both legitimate and illegitimate, but she was unrepentant, indeed defiant, because she believed she was “saving the future of the babies”.

Reading Fatima’s self-righteous comments, I found myself wondering what the child — if it could speak — would have to say about the transaction of which it was the unwitting subject matter or even what had become of the child in the aftermath of Fatima’s arrest. Interestingly, however, not only were the news reports silent in this regard but there was no outpouring of public outrage on the injustice done to an individual life that had neither the opportunity nor the capacity to defend itself!

I must admit, I am particularly sensitive to children being removed from their parents. Someone very close to me was allowed by her parents to be ‘adopted’ by a childless aunt. Despite the fact that the aunt was prosperous and loved the girl (even after she had a son of her own), this girl, while growing up, felt an unexplained insecurity which, when she discovered the truth of her parentage, transformed into a full-fledged sense of abandonment that not only remained stamped on her psyche, despite many subsequent positive experiences, but also adversely impacted her intimate relationships. If this form ofadoption, which is reasonably prevalent in Pakistan, and which offers perhaps the most secure environment to a child removed from her parents, can be quite so painful, how much more traumatic would be the likely effect of a removal to an unknown fate?

For despite the police charging Fatima for “selling for the purpose of prostitution” — heinous as it may be — we do not know the real purpose behind her business. Child trafficking is rampantinternationally and generally involves exploitation of children from Third World countries for sexual activity, child pornography, forced labour, slavery, removal of organs, illicit international adoption, early marriage, recruitment as child soldiers, beggars, athletes (such as camel jockeys or football players) and even for recruitment by cults, possibly as potential sacrifices! In our local context, it is quite likely that children sold in this manner may be easily groomed as potential terrorists.

Recognising the gravity, not to mention the sheer injustice, of child trafficking, the United Nations signed the Protocol to Prevent and Punish Trafficking in Persons, especially Women and Children which came into force in 2003 and to date has been signed by 117 countries.Pakistan, however, is not one of the signatories. It is therefore not surprising that Pakistani police, in merely framing a charge of ‘selling for prostitution’ against Fatima, would take either a deliberately narrow view of the situation (perhaps to protect Fatima’s allegedly influential protectors) or reveal their ignorance of the enormity of the situation and thereby allow Fatima an opportunity to escape if the specific charge of prostitution remains unproven.

Whilst Fatima may be released, and after allowing sufficient time for the scandal to die down, continue her activities under a new guise, we will never know what became of the children she sold. The luckiest of them may have been reunited with their families (provided there are families that they may be returned to and who themselves are not willing beneficiaries of the crime) whilst others may only live as fading memories or mere statistics. Perhaps one day we may encounter some of them on the street as they press against our car windows begging for alms or selling flowers, or perhaps someday one of them may simply be the body part gruesomely photographed in the aftermath of an attack by a child suicide bomber. But we will never know what they suffered, because these children could not speak.

Published in The Express Tribune, June 9th, 2011.

Toute L'Histoire: Les Mazarin de l'Elysée

Toute L'Histoire:  Les Mazarin de l'Elysée

La chaîne Toute L'Histoire propose ce soir un reportage très vivant sur les éminences grises que sont les conseillers spéciaux de l'Élysée

Tags :

Par Charles Jaigu lefigaro.fr/ mise en ligne Bertrand Guyard Publié le 09/06/2011 à 10:50

Authorities trafficking 'illegal' children

Authorities trafficking 'illegal' children
Charlie Butts - OneNewsNow - 6/8/2011 3:30:00 AM

Asian childA research group that aims to expose the myth of overpopulation has evidence that some Chinese officials are trafficking children who are born to couples that have already reached the state-imposed limit of one child.

 

Steven Mosher heads the Population Research Institute (PRI) and reports that when population police discover the extra child, they first demand a fine three to five-times the family's annual income.

"If the family can't pay that fine, and this is a huge fine by anybody's standards, then sometimes, population control officials in South China will take the child from the parents," he explains. "They will then turn around and sell that child to a state-run orphanage, which, in turn, will put the child up for adoption."

Steve Mosher PRIAnd that agency charges a hefty fee for the service. In effect, the babies are treated like property of the state, ready to be sold.

"This is child trafficking; this is something that we have passed laws against in the U.S. Congress, and yet it's happening in China, along with infanticide, along with the abandoning of baby girls at birth," Mosher laments. "We now find that some of these little boys and girls are being trafficked as well, some of them across international borders."


He adds that Chinese press is reporting it, and PRI sources have confirmed it in at least two provinces. So the PRI president suggests the least the United States can do is issue a moratorium on adoptions from those provinces.

Adoptions International Semester 1, 2011: best result ever for Ai.Bi.

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Adoptions International Semester 1, 2011: best result ever for Ai.Bi.

At 30 June 2011 the number of adoptions made ??by Ai.Bi. has reached 109 children (67 males, 42 females) for a total of 85 adoptive couples.

This is a major achievement for the Association which this year celebrates 25 years of commitment and fight against the abandonment emergency.

A significant increase in international adoption when compared to the same period of 2010, when adoptions completed by Ai.Bi. were 99. This year, so there is an increase of 9%.

In this first half of 2011, leading the ranking of the children adopted through Friends of Children are minors from Colombiaand China , respectively, with 00:20 adoptions completed.

Following in the rankings there are children from Brazil (14) , Russian Federation (11) , Bolivia (8) , Democratic Republic of Congo (7) , Peru (6) , Ukraine (4) , Sri Lanka , Chile and Mexico (3) , Nepal (2) , and Albania, Bulgaria, Mongolia, Cambodia (1).

A positive and important signal also comes from the reduction in average waiting time needed to complete the adoption.And 'the case of China where the availability of adoption of children green channel (children with special needs) leads to a very short time complete the adoption: about 8 months.

Even in the case of children from Colombia , the timing for the adoption fell, coming in the first half of 2011 to an average ofabout 6 months of waiting .

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Adozioni Internazionali, 1° Semestre 2011: miglior risultato di sempre per Ai.Bi.

Al 30 giugno 2011 il numero di adozioni internazionali realizzate da Ai.Bi. ha raggiunto quota 109 bambini (67 maschi, 42 femmine) per un totale di 85 coppie adottive.

Si tratta di un risultato importante per l’associazione che proprio quest’anno compie 25 anni di impegno e lotta contro l’emergenza abbandono.

Un aumento delle adozioni internazionali significativo se rapportato allo stesso periodo del 2010, quando le adozioni concluse da Ai.Bi. sono state 99. Quest’anno si registra quindi una crescita del 9%.

In questo primo semestre del 2011, a guidare la classifica dei bambini adottati grazie ad Amici dei Bambini vi sono i minori provenienti da Colombia e Cina, rispettivamente con 24 e 20 adozioni portate a termine.

A seguire, in questa classifica vi sono i bambini provenienti da Brasile (14), Federazione Russa (11), Bolivia (8), Repubblica Democratica del Congo (7), Perù (6), Ucraina (4), Sri Lanka, Cile e Messico (3), Nepal (2) e Albania, Bulgaria, Mongolia, Cambogia (1).

Un segnale positivo ed importante arriva anche dalla riduzione dei tempi medi di attesa necessari per portare a termine l’adozione. E’ il caso della Cina dove la disponibilità all’adozione di bambini del canale verde (minori con bisogni particolari) porta a tempi di realizzazione dell’adozione estremamente rapidi: intorno agli 8 mesi.

Anche nel caso dei bambini provenienti dalla Colombia, i tempi per l’adozione si sono ridotti, arrivando nel primo semestre del 2011 ad una media di circa 6 mesi di attesa.