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Romania: a new step towards the release of international adoptions

Date: 24-02-11
Romania: a new step towards the release of international adoptions
The legislative proposal of the Association Catharsis Romania to resume international adoptions has made another step forward: the members of the Commission on Human Rights, Cults and National Minorities Issues with the Chamber of Deputies assigned to the task deputy Sergiu Andon to follow the construction, from a technical standpoint, the bill will be 'discussed in Parliament.

"It 's great news for us, the committee's decision proves that we are on track. We believe that we will give the children a loving family as they deserve. If things go well it is hoped that the early summer of the law is passed and enacted " said nitrogen Popescu, president of Catharsis.

According to Popescu, while in 2004 in Romania were approximately 44,000 abandoned children, in 2010 their number reached nearly 80,000. Most of them are institutionalized and Romania each state spends about € 10,000 a year. On the other hand, according to official figures provided by the management association in the district of Brasov, there are about 600 children adopted from Romania and only 60 families wishing to adopt. "Unfortunately, in the case of abandoned children in Romania begins with institutionalization and you end up the same with the institutionalization. Normally, this should only be used when all alternatives have been exhausted " , said Popescu.

The members of the House of Representatives have asked the promoters of the proposal to provide articles and paragraphs from the international instruments of private international law that promote adoption. A week ago, the association's lawyers have sent to Bucharest a dossier that includes 16 pieces of legislation that refer to international adoptions , documents including the 1998 UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, the Hague Convention of 29 May 1993 on the protection of Children and Cooperation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption, the European Convention on the Adoption of Children, adopted in Strasbourg in April 1967 and the Treaties of Maastricht and Lisbon on the European Union, all these pieces of legislation signed and ratified by Romania .

Also, with the documents requested by Members, the Association Catharsis has introduced a new series of letters received from abroad , families from New Zealand or the United States, couples in the 90s have adopted orphans from Romania.Many of the letters received from families who reside in Canada, Romania, Cyprus, Germany, Italy, Norway and the United States, which 'was denied the right to adopt a child from Romania only for the fact that they have permanent residence abroad.Several families of the letters that although they had approved the dossier, were unable to complete the procedure because of the moratorium of 2001.

(Source: www.mytex.ro of 22/02/2011)

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Romania: un nuovo passo in avanti verso lo sblocco delle adozioni internazionali

La proposta legislativa dell’Associazione romena Catharsis per riprendere le adozioni internazionali ha fatto ancora un passo in avanti: i membri della Commissione dei Diritti dell’Uomo, Culti e Problemi con le Minoranze Nazionali della Camera dei Deputati hanno assegnato al deputato Sergiu Andon il compito di seguire la realizzazione, dal punto di vista tecnico, del disegno di legge che sara’ discusso in Parlamento.

“E’ una grande notizia per noi, la decisione della commissione dimostra che siamo sulla buona strada. Siamo convinti che daremo ai bambini una famiglia amorevole come meritano. Se le cose vanno bene si spera che all’inizio dell’estate la legge sia votata e promulgata”, ha dichiarato Azota Popescu, presidentessa dell’Associazione Catharsis.

Secondo la Popescu, mentre nel 2004 in Romania erano circa 44.000 i bambini abbandonati, nel 2010 il loro numero ha raggiunto quasi 80.000. La maggior parte di loro sono istituzionalizzati e per ciascuno di essi lo Stato romeno spende circa 10.000 euro all’anno. Dall’altra parte, secondo i dati ufficiali forniti dalla direzione dell’associazione, nel distretto di Brasov ci sono circa 600 bambini adottabili e solo 60 famiglie dalla Romania che desiderano adottare. “Purtroppo, nel caso dei bambini abbandonati, in Romania si inizia con l’istituzionalizzazione e si finisce lo stesso con l’istituzionalizzazione.Normalmente, questa soluzione dovrebbe essere usata solo quando tutte le alternative sono state esaurite”, ha detto la Popescu.

I membri della commissione della Camera dei Deputati hanno richiesto ai promotori della proposta di fornire articoli e paragrafi dai documenti internazionali di diritto privato internazionale che promuovono l’adozione internazionale. Una settimana fa gli avvocati dell’associazione hanno inviato a Bucarest un dossier che comprende 16 atti normativi che fanno riferimento alle adozioni internazionali, documenti tra cui la Convenzione ONU del 1998 sui diritti del fanciullo, la Convenzione dell’Aja del 29 maggio 1993 sulla protezione dei minori e la cooperazione in materia di adozione internazionale, la Convenzione Europea sull’adozione dei minori, adottata a Strasburgo nel mese di aprile 1967 e dai Trattati di Maastricht e di Lisbona sull’Unione Europea, tutti questi atti normativi firmati e ratificati dalla Romania.

Inoltre, con i documenti richiesti dai deputati, l’Associazione Catharsis ha presentato una nuova serie di lettere ricevute dall’estero, dalle famiglie dalla Nuova Zelanda o degli Stati Uniti, coppie che negli anni ’90 hanno adottato orfani dalla Romania. Molte le lettere ricevute da famiglie romene che risiedono in Canada, Cipro, Germania, Italia, Norvegia e Stati Uniti, a cui e’ stato negato il diritto di adottare un bambino dalla Romania solo per il fatto che hanno residenza permanente all’estero. Diverse anche le lettere delle famiglie che nonostante avessero avuto i dossier approvati, non hanno potuto portare a termine le procedure a causa della Moratoria del 2001.

(Fonte: www.mytex.ro del 22.02.2011)

Ai.Bi. cerca famiglie o single per l’accoglienza di minori tunisini

<<indietro

Ai.Bi. cerca famiglie o single per l’accoglienza di minori tunisini

Ai.Bi. Amici dei Bambini in collaborazione con il Centro Affidi di Messina e l’Assessorato alle Politiche per l’integrazione multietnica del comune di Messina cerca famiglie o single per l’accoglienza di minori tunisini.

Sono circa 4mila i migranti sbarcati a Lampedusa negli ultimi giorni, é in corso un vero e proprio esodo dalla Tunisia verso l’Italia.

A Messina sono stati già accolti alcuni minori non accompagnati per i quali si deve provvedere con urgenza ad una soluzione che sia diversa dall’accoglienza in strutture residenziali.

Considerata l’importanza e l’urgenza di dare ospitalità e serenità a questi minori, Ai.Bi. , il Centro Affidi e l’assessorato alle politiche per l’integrazione multietnica, sono impegnate a cercare  famiglie o single che intendono ospitare i ragazzi e a cui impartire una formazione specifica sull’affido. 

Nella fattispecie l’affido è l’accoglienza temporanea di un minore in una famiglia diversa, un intervento con cui si aiutano il bambino o il ragazzo e la famiglia d’origine che non è in grado di garantire un ambiente adatto a una crescita e a uno sviluppo sereni.

La disponibilità all’affidamento può essere:

  • di tipo diurno o part-time (quando è limitato ad alcune ore della giornata)
  • di tipo residenziale: quando il minore va a vivere, per un periodo di tempo, presso la famiglia affidataria.

Per informazioni:

Ai.Bi. Amici dei Bambini –Sicilia –

Tel. 090.48101
Cell. 366.6710166

Mike Hancock wins courts case over paedophile allegation

Mike Hancock wins courts case over paedophile allegation

Posted by Mark Pack on Thu 24th February 2011; This entry is filed under Election law, News.

Tags: justice and anti-corruption party, les cummings, mike hancock, phil woolas, portsmouth south

The BBC reports:

A rival who falsely claimed a Liberal Democrat MP was a paedophile has been convicted of attempting to affect a result in the general election.

Lost in Vasai 31 yrs ago, sisters found in Sweden


Lost in Vasai 31 yrs ago, sisters found in Sweden

The girls who, as minors, were separated from their family, were later adopted and taken abroad


Ram Parmar
Posted On Wednesday, February 23, 2011 at 06:38:20 AM


Thirty-one years after her daughters - five-year-old Ghulab and three-year-old Laxmi went missing in Vasai - Jamnibai Dhangad, a daily wage labourer, still lives in the hope of meeting them again.



Thanks to the efforts of a string of do-gooders over the last three decades, the chances of that happening are closer than anyone would’ve imagined, but still some way from being a happy ending.

The daughters have been traced to Sweden, and travelled to India a couple of years ago hoping to reconnect with their biological mother, but after that failed attempt, their communication has been restricted to an exchange of photographs and a letter the daughters have now written her.

When the girls went missing, Jamnibai filed a complaint with Vasai Police Station. Days passed by and there was no trace of the girls, forcing Dhangad to approach activist Peter D’Souza, who worked with Catholic Co-operative Bank in Vasai.

Another activist, Marcus Dabre, joined the search, and found out from the Nana Chowk Police Station in Grant Road that the two girls were found by cops and sent to the Umerkhadi Children’s Home. That was in November 1980.

When the children’s home authorities couldn’t help, the family filed a petition in the Bombay High Court.



(From left) Anna and Sophia wrote to their mother Jamnibai Dhangad in 2008. They were traced thanks to the efforts of activist Marcus Dabre among others

Three years later, in 1983, the HC was told that two girls who matched Ghulab and Laxmi’s age and description were registered at a shelter home in the city known to give up children for adoption to foreign nationals.

Dabre said, “The court contacted the shelter home’s founder Mridula Rao, who confirmed the two girls were adopted by Ericcson and Preet, a couple from Sweden. However, Rao only had basic details of the couple and that didn’t help.”

The activists approached Cardinal Simon Pimenta, who wrote to all churches in Sweden requesting details of the two girls.

The story was published in local newspapers in 1985, following which a photographer, Rafique Elyas, contacted the family. It took another two years before Elyas met the family in 1988.

Gradually, Dhangad and the activists started coming to terms with the possibility of never finding the girls. But in 2008, Dabre says, they received an email from the Swedish Consulate confirming the women’s address.

“The girls’ pictures were shown to Jamnibai, who initially went numb, and later cried hysterically.”

Jamnibai’s search may have ended, but her ordeal has not, as she is yet to meet her daughters because of financial constraints. What she does know is Ghulab is now known as Anna, while Laxmi was renamed Sofia by her adopted parents.


Ghulab is a nurse and has a three-year-old son Casper while Laxmi works in a hotel and is the mother of two daughters, Rebecca, 7, and 10-year-old Clara. They communicated with Dhangad but she was unable to read the letter written in English.

Dhangad said, “The only aim in my life is to meet my daughters. I am so happy to learn they are well-settled. I’m told their respective husbands take good care of them.

Hopefully before I die, I will be able to meet them, and my grandchildren.” Dabre said, “Dhangad has a passport and hopefully one day, she will fly out to Sweden to meet her daughters.”

Kaisa Hammar from Goteborg, who played a huge role in tracing the women, said she was in talks with them. “I am so happy that Anna and Sofia have found their biological family again. A day will come, hopefully, when a grand reunion will happen.”

Elyas, who has followed the case closely, prefers to wait for that day rather than celebrate prematurely. “On the one hand, we have a tribal woman with an organic hunger to meet her daughters.

On the other, we have the two daughters, who have grown up in Sweden as Swedish citizens, and are well settled in life. For them, making the effort to meet their mother is a much bigger journey than any of us can imagine.”





Lib Dem MP accused of being a paedophile admits he 'kissed and cuddled' the teenage girl

Lib Dem MP accused of being a paedophile admits he 'kissed and cuddled' the teenage girl

By DAILY MAIL REPORTER

UPDATED: 12:32 GMT, 23 February 2011

We had a 'close and affectionate' relationship, admits MP

Slurs: MP Mike Hancock was branded 'a paedophile' by an election rival who accused him of 'having sex with a 14-year-old girl'

Baby, stranded in Ukraine, to join Belgian parents

Baby, stranded in Ukraine, to join Belgian parents

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Laurent Ghilain, Peter MeurrensAP – In this photo taken Sunday, Feb. 20, 2011, Laurent Ghilain, 27, left, and Peter Meurrens, 37, are seen …

LODEVE, France – Baby Samuel's room has been waiting for him for more than two years. The crib stands empty in the corner. Above it hangs a mobile in the shape of a friendly dragon. On the dresser a toy bus stands idle.

Samuel Ghilain, born 2 years and 3 months ago to a surrogate mother in Ukraine, has so far been unable to leave that country. Because of legal hurdles, he has not been able to join his parents — a married pair of Belgian men who now live in this town in the south of France, where they moved to give their baby a quiet childhood.

Instead, he's in a Ukrainian orphanage.

The long and painful separation now seems about to come to an end. After more than two years of denying Samuel a passport, the Belgian Foreign Ministry issued him one Monday. He should arrive in Brussels within days.

The ministry's decision came after a Belgian court finally issued a ruling in the couple's favor last week, saying bureaucrats had committed numerous errors.

Belgium is largely silent on surrogate motherhood and any rights a child born that way might have, leaving the way open to different interpretations. His parents' sexuality poses no direct legal bar to bringing Samuel to Belgium. But his parents — Laurent Ghilain, a 27-year-old fitness trainer, and Peter Meurrens, a 37-year-old cardiologist — say that some bureaucrats in both countries were anti-gay.

They say the Belgian official who worked hardest to prevent the baby from being allowed into the country implied in court that, because they were gay, they could not be good parents.

While victory appears to be at hand, Ghilain and Meurrens have been told so many times their problems were nearly solved that it frightens them to have hope.

"For the last two years, almost every month there was somebody telling us ... it will take only one week and then he will be with you," Meurrens said.

But he added, "finally, I am starting to believe I will see him in a few days."

Ghilain said it has been a difficult journey.

"We were constantly making giant steps forward, and each time, within a minute, there were three steps backward to make us come back to earth," Ghilain said. "So it really was an emotional yo-yo."

Ghilain and Meurrens met in the hospital in Brussels where they both worked, and fell in love.

Both wanted children and, failing to find a suitable surrogate mother in Belgium, they dealt with an agency in Ukraine they thought was reliable. They went there in November 2007 to choose the eggs, based on information about the donors. Meurrens joked that his main criterion was that he wanted a child that looked like him as well as Ghilain, who is the biological father.

The pair consulted Belgian authorities, who told them there would normally not be a problem. So on March 10, 2008, two embryos were implanted in the surrogate mother.

Then the couple prepared for a family. On Sept. 13, 2008, in Brussels City Hall, they got married.

Seeking a quieter life for their child-to-be, they moved to Lodeve. It is a quiet town surrounded by hills and vineyards, full of ancient stone houses where laundry flaps from the balconies — a town where old men sit on benches, talking about life, and the gentle whooshing of a small river is ever-present.

They say it was a good choice. "People accepted us immediately," Meurrens said.

But then the problems began — not there, but in Ukraine, first with the surrogate mother.

"You agree on how much you contribute to the surrogacy mother to improve a bit her life, like a bigger apartment, clothing when she is bigger," Meurrens said. But then, he said, she wanted money for the dentist, for a new cell phone, and other things.

"And it was always like, if you don't pay, we can always abort," he said. "Even up to six months pregnancy they were threatening us to abort the child. So actually they keep your child in hostage."

But Samuel was born Nov. 28, 2008. The following day, the two men held the newborn in their arms. And suddenly, it was real. "Up until we saw our son, we didn't believe it," Meurrens said.

But getting a passport proved all but impossible. At first, Meurrens lied to the embassy in Kiev, saying he'd had an affair with a local girl who wanted nothing to do with the baby. But they checked the records and discovered Meurrens was married to a man, and the story crumbled.

Other issues arose — none of them seemingly insurmountable, yet the goal was never reached. There were always more forms to fill out, or a stamp was missing on a document, or the translation was imperfect, and so on.

Meanwhile, the couple placed Samuel with a foster family, at a cost of euro1,000 ($1,365) a month. But eventually, they went broke. Desperate, in March 2010, they tried to smuggle the boy out of the country to Poland, crossing the border themselves, then waiting for a woman to drive their baby across. The attempt failed. And that was the last time Meurrens and Ghilain saw their son. It cost them euro10,000 euros to get the charges dropped against the woman who tried to help them. And they cannot return to Ukraine for fear of being jailed.

That failure, both men said, was their hardest moment.

Since then, Samuel has been in an orphanage. The orphanage needed the same documents they would need for an adoption — proof of financial means and psychological fitness. Ghilain did a DNA test to prove paternity and prevent the orphanage from letting someone else adopt Samuel.

Meanwhile, in Lodeve, the newborn clothes have been discarded, replaced by larger ones, and then larger ones still. Meurrens, who studied Russian, the language of the foster family, is now trying to learn Ukrainian, the language of the orphanage. Their son speaks not a word of French.

Ghilain said he and his husband tried to investigate everything before they began the process.

"We didn't get into this blindly at all," he said. "All the questions, the issues we faced during those two years, we'd asked about them from the very beginning."

The organization in Ukraine told them many couples had done the same thing without problems.

"This, we understood afterwards, was not at all true," Ghilain said.

Belgian Foreign Minister Steven Vanackere said in a statement last week that a "gap in the law" made it problematic for the country to recognize the use by Belgians of surrogate mothers in other countries. He asked for new regulations on surrogate mothers to explicitly prevent all forms of "commercial exploitation."

The 200-year-old stone house Ghilain and Meurrens have in Lodeve, its wooden shutters light blue against the brown of the walls, is ready. A fire warms the hearth, the crib still waits, and pictures of Samuel adorn the walls.

"We want to be normal parents and to give him a normal life," Ghilain said.

It is a house full of life, inhabited by two small parrots, five cats and an enthusiastic English Cocker Spaniel. In one outdoor aviary live 20 tiny exotic birds; 10 more birds live in a separate one. A lot of pets.

"That's what happens," Meurrens said, only half joking, "when you don't have children."

Înc? un pas spre reluarea adop?iilor interna?ionale

Înc? un pas spre reluarea adop?iilor interna?ionale

22.02.2011 10:20:04 (Arhiva)

Publicitate

Propunerea legislativ? a Asocia?iei „Catharsis“ de a fi reluate adop?iile interna?ionale, a mai f?cut un pas c?tre împlinire, membrii Comisiei pentru Drepturile Omului, Culte ?i Probleme ale Minorit??ilor Na?ionale din Camera Deputa?ilor desemnîndu-l pe deputatul Sergiu Andon s? elaboreze, din punct de vedere tehnic, proiectul de lege care va fi supus dezbaterii Parlamentului. „Este o veste extraordinar? pentru noi, decizia comisiei ne arat? c? sîntem pe drumul cel bun. Credem c? vom reu?i s? d?m copiilor o familie iubitoare a?a cum merit?. Dac? lucrurile vor decurge normal, sper?m ca la începutul verii s? putem avea aceast? lege votat? ?i promulgat?“, a declarat ieri, Azota Popescu (foto), pre?edintele Asocia?iei „Catharsis“.

Au cerut acte normative interna?ionale

Over 800 gangs part of India’s missing children trial, says CBI

Over 800 gangs part of India’s missing children trial, says CBI

Chetan Chauhan, Hindustan Times

New Delhi, February 21, 2011

Email to Author

First Published: 21:16 IST(21/2/2011)

Spanish mother reunited with daughter she was told had died at birth

Spanish mother reunited with daughter she was told had died at birth

Case is latest in growing scandal over babies allegedly stolen by doctors and sold for adoption over several decades

Giles Tremlett in Madrid

guardian.co.uk, Sunday 20 February 2011 18.16 GMT

Article history

Adoption, toujours le grand flou

Adoption, toujours le grand flou 

Publié le samedi 19 février 2011 à 01H00

Toutes les tentatives de donner un cadre à l’adoption en Polynésie ont échoué. La pratique du don d’enfant entre familles polynésiennes et métropolitaines se poursuit sans structure, ni accompagnement. Au grand dam de toutes les parties prenantes.

Marielle et Olivier Chautard, en compagnie de leurs trois enfants Poerani, Hinanui et Vaea. “Nous avons les deux situations : adoption simple et plénière” explique le couple. “Les mamans ont choisi. Elles ont choisi plénière pour protéger les enfants d’un père biologique avec lequel il fallait couper le lien juridique. Cela ne nous pose aucun problème.”

ADELINE BRISSET