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US Senator visits Ethiopia to discuss plight of children

US Senator visits Ethiopia to discuss plight of children
September 5th, 2010 in News, Society42 views
APA-Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) United States Senator Mary Landrieu is visiting Ethiopia to meet with Ethiopian officials and representatives of international and local organizations in order to discuss children’s issues, including the plight of orphans and other vulnerable children in the country, APA learns here on Saturday.



Senator Landrieu in her three day tour will be visiting orphanages, child care centres, and other facilities and interacting with over 500 Ethiopian children at these venues.



She will also have the opportunity to meet with the President of Ethiopia Girma Wolde Giorgis among others.



Senator Landrieu is joined by Ambassador Susan Jacobs, the US Department of State Senior Advisor for Children’s Issues ; Gary Newton, the US Agency for International Development’s Special Advisor for orphans and vulnerable children ; and a prominent group of American business leaders and representatives from Buckner International/Bright Hope, an NGO focused on children’s issues in Ethiopia and around the world.



During their visit to Ethiopia, Senator Landrieu and the other members of the delegation hope to share the US experience on children’s issues, including adoption and foster care, and learn from Ethiopian experts and child welfare specialists about the Ethiopian situation.



“In my first visit to Ethiopia, I have been struck by the dedication of all those committed to assisting children and families in need. Their efforts have had a profound effect on me,” said Senator Landrieu.



DT/daj/APA

2010-09-04

Russia calls halt to Irish adoptions

Russia calls halt to Irish adoptions
05 September 2010 By Susan Mitchell

Difficulties with intercountry adoptions from Russia have resurfaced, with fears mounting that hundreds of Irish couples could be blocked from completing their adoptions.

It is understood that the Russian authorities have stopped adoptions. Prospective adopters are being told that Russia is no longer accepting referrals from Ireland.

Russian authorities have consistently claimed they have not received post-placement reports from Ireland. These reports detail how adopted children have integrated into their Irish families.

Oleg Bikmametov, a diplomat at the Russian embassy in Dublin, said ‘‘the ball was in the court of Irish’’ officials.

He was unable to clarify whether all Health Service Executive (HSE) areas had been blacklisted, or whether all Russian regions had stopped processing adoptions from Ireland.

The HSE has been heavily criticised for failing to ensure post-placement reports are carried out, but there appear to be administrative problems at the Russian embassy, which sends the reports to Russia.

A spokesman for the Office of the Minister for Children and Youth Affairs said it was awaiting details of an audit of post-placement adoption reports that the Russian embassy had said it would carry out. In April, Minister for Children Barry Andrews said his information from the HSE was that more than half of the reports listed by the Russian authorities as outstanding had been completed by adoptive parents and forwarded to the Russian embassy in Dublin.

Oleg Oleynikov, who helps facilitate intercountry adoptions from Russia, said parents, the HSE and the embassy were to blame.

He said the updated Russian blacklist named the HSE and the Adoption Board as failing to comply with its standards. Other countries have also been placed on the blacklist, he said.

‘‘The situation is not unique to Ireland, but other countries are doing things to solve the issue. I understand that nobody has contacted the Ministry for Education directly, apart from the Irish embassy, which made a few simple enquiries," said Oleynikov.

Oleynikov has facilitated adoptions from Russia to Ireland since 1998.He said he had 25 couples on his books who had been given referrals for children in Russia. Out of those, 12 couples had already travelled to Russia and met the children.

Oleynikov said his clients were extremely concerned. Kiernan Gildea, registrar at the Adoption Authority of Ireland, said the authority had no direct contact with Russian authorities as there was no bilateral agreement between the two countries.


 

Ambassador Roemer and Ambassador Susan Jacobs, India

Ambassador Roemer and Ambassador Susan Jacobs, Special Advisor for International Children’s Issues, met September 16, 2010. Ambassador Jacobs is visiting to discuss India’s accession to the Hague Convention on the civil aspects of International Child Abduction with senior Government of India officials.
 
 

Des enfants congolais scolarisés grâce à votre générosité

5/9/2010

Des enfants congolais scolarisés grâce à votre générosité

L'effervescence qui entoure chez nous la rentrée des classes ne fait que raviver chez Julienne Mpemba des souvenirs douloureux. A plusieurs reprises, elle a été renvoyée de l'école publique où elle était inscrite au Congo: sa maman n'avait pas de quoi payer le minerval. La situation financière de la RDC s'étant encore dégradée, ce sont des milliers d'enfants, non scolarisés, qui traînent, aujourd'hui, dans les rues. En 2008, avec d'autres personnes sensibilisées au sort des Congolais, elle a lancé l'asbl Tumaini. Tumaini, cela veut dire "espérer" en swahili. En versant 125 € par an, le prix d'un parrainage, un enfant est assuré d'aller à l'école pendant toute une année. En octobre, Julienne Mpemba quittera pendant quelques mois Namur où elle vit pour le Congo. Elle va, installer à Kinshasa, un bureau relais avec l'association. Le 11 septembre prochain, l'asbl Tumaini organise, à Belgrade, un souper. Il s'agit là aussi de récolter des fonds pour aider les enfants.

Julienne Mpemba est installée, depuis plusieurs années maintenant, à Namur. Il y a des souvenirs qu'elle n'est pas prête d'effacer de sa mémoire. Orpheline de père alors qu'elle n'était encore qu'une enfant, elle a connu la dure réalité de la vie. Elle raconte: "Jusqu'au décès de papa, j'étais inscrite dans une école huppée où j'ai appris beaucoup de choses. L'enseignement y était excellent, c'est comme ça que j'ai eu de très bonnes bases en français comme en mathématiques." Une école payante bien sûr. Lorsque la maman se retrouve seule avec ses enfants, il n'est plus possible pour Julienne de suivre sa scolarité dans un établissement aussi privilégié. "J'ai été inscrite dans une école publique moins renommée mais toujours de bonne qualité. Nous étions plus de 40 enfants par classe. Plusieurs fois, j'ai été renvoyée de l'école parce que maman n'avait pas payé les frais de fonctionnement. Je rentrais à la maison et le lendemain, je retournais à l'école avec l'argent. J'ai des camarades qui n'ont jamais pu revenir à l'école faute de moyens et aujourd'hui, ils ont le niveau qu'ils avaient en primaire. C'est révoltant. A mon époque, à la fin des années 80, des enfants dans ma situation il y en avait cinq ou six par classe. Maintenant, c'est bien pire: c'est la moitié d'une classe qui est concernée." Une classe où les enfants sont 60 à suivre les cours. Ils sont tellement nombreux que des écoliers suivent les cours de 7h30 à 12h et d'autres de 13h à 17h. La semaine suivante, on inverse.

Acheter son banc

Congolese children attending school thanks to your generosity

The excitement that surrounds us back to school only rekindles painful memories in Julienne Mpemba. Several times, she was expelled from the public school where she was enrolled in the Congo: her mother could not afford the tuition. The financial situation of the DRC having deteriorated further, it is thousands of children, who are not in school, who are hanging around the streets today. In 2008, with other people made aware of the fate of the Congolese, she launched the Tumaini association. Tumaini means "hope" in Swahili. By paying € 125 per year, the price of a sponsorship, a child is guaranteed to go to school for a whole year. In October, Julienne Mpemba will leave Namur for a few months where she lives for the Congo. She is going to settle in Kinshasa, a relay office with the association. On September 11, the non-profit organization Tumaini is organizing a dinner in Belgrade. It is also about raising funds to help children.

Julienne Mpemba has been living in Namur for several years now. There are memories that she is not ready to erase from her memory. Fatherless when she was still a child, she experienced the harsh reality of life. She says: "Until Dad died, I was enrolled in an upscale school where I learned a lot. The teaching was excellent, that's how I had a very good foundation in French as in mathematics. " A paying school of course. When the mother finds herself alone with her children, it is no longer possible for Julienne to follow her education in such a privileged establishment."I was enrolled in a less renowned public school but still of good quality. We were more than 40 children per class. Several times I was expelled from school because my mother had not paid the fees. I came home and the next day I went back to school with the money. I have comrades who have never been able to go back to school for lack of means and today they have the level that they had in primary school. It is revolting. In my time, at the end of the 80s, children in my situation there were five or six per class. Now, it is much worse: it is the half of a class that is affected. "A class where the children are 60 to follow the lessons. There are so many of them that schoolchildren attend classes from 7:30 to 12:00 and others from 1:00 to 5:00. The following week, we reverse.

Buy his bench

"Not continuing your studies for lack of financial means is horrible, says Julienne Mpemba. I had a boyfriend who was a hit during university preparation but he was so poor that his parents could not to pay the fees. He would have been a perfect lawyer, his case still haunts me today. "But it is well before the university that the door of the school is difficult to cross. Thus, a child can only be enrolled in kindergarten in the private sector and it is of course paid. Many therefore do not enter school until the age of 6 without having learned the ba-ba.

We still come to situations that could be laughable if behind there was such disarray. So that her daughter can follow her schooling, Julienne's mom will go to a carpenter to whom she will ask to build a bench. The school accepted Julienne but there was no more seat! She went to school with her bench wedged it in front of the teacher's desk and she took her lessons.

FBI Busts Major U.S. Human Trafficking Ring In Hawaii

FBI Busts Major U.S. Human Trafficking Ring In Hawaii

 

mordechai.jpg
Credit: Seattle Post Intelligencer/Grant M. Haller
Back in 2006, Global Horizons chief Mordechai Orian (right) was photographed shaking hands with United Farm Workers President Arturo Rodriguez, left, after signing a labor pact to improve worker conditions.

 

Now, would you be surprised if I told you one of the major players in this ring, Israeli national Mordechai Orian, is a big Republican donor? Of course you wouldn't.

More disturbing (at least to me) in light of the charges is his affiliation with a Texas adoption agency.

It turns out that Orian is listed as the president and "business manager" for Adoption Services Worldwide Inc., a San Antonio, Texas adoption agency active in international adoptions. The website features many pictures of Orian with happy adoptive families. I have to wonder: Exactly what kind of business services did this Beverly Hills resident provide to this Texas company?

Here's hoping he wasn't using his control over these trapped and vulnerable workers to coerce them and their families into giving up children for adoption. Perhaps he's simply trying to do something good to make up for all the bad he was doing; I certainly hope so.

HONOLULU -- Six recruiters were accused Thursday of luring 400 laborers from Thailand to the United States and forcing them to work, according to a federal indictment that the FBI called the largest human-trafficking case ever charged in U.S. history.

The indictment alleges that the scheme was orchestrated by four employees of labor recruiting company Global Horizons Manpower Inc. and two Thailand-based recruiters. It said the recruiters lured the workers with false promises of lucrative jobs, then confiscated their passports, failed to honor their employment contracts and threatened to deport them.

Once the Thai laborers arrived in the United States starting in May 2004, they were put to work and have since been sent to sites in states including Hawaii, Washington, California, Colorado, Florida, Kentucky, Massachusetts, New York, Ohio, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and Utah, according to attorneys and advocates.

Many laborers were initially taken to farms in Hawaii and Washington, where work conditions were the worst, said Chancee Martorell, executive director for the Los Angeles-based Thai Community Development Center, which represents 263 Thai workers who were brought to the U.S. by Global Horizons.

[...] The six defendants include Global Horizons President and CEO Mordechai Orian, 45; Director of International Relations Pranee Tubchumpol, 44; Hawaii regional supervisor Shane Germann, 41; and onsite field supervisor Sam Wongsesanit, 39. The Thailand recruiters were identified as Ratawan Chunharutai and Podjanee Sinchai.

But wait, it gets better:

In 2006, Global Horizons was implicated for violating labor laws and underpaying 88 Thai workers. Orian initially denied the charges but ultimately settled the case for $300,000.

In 2007, Orian legally -- and unsuccessfully -- went after a rival labor contractor, J&A Contracting, to whom he had lost one of his biggest clients. According to Fortune magazine, he claimed it was because J&A "provides cheaper, illegal workers, scooping workers up on street corners by the vanload and delivering them to farms." He also claimed he had "evidence of falsified Social Security cards" as proof.

In what now appears to be a twisted irony, Orian at the time presented himself as a moral crusader against illegal immigration. His lawyer then, David Klehm, told Fortune the lawsuit would reflect a new era of accountability for employers when it comes to workers

http://crooksandliars.com/susie-madrak/fbi-busts-major-us-human-trafficking-

 

LHS student reconnects with twin brother in Ethiopia

Photos

Amanual Abate
Courtesy photo

Amanual Abate, far right, with his Lexington family, from left: Dawit, Yordanos, Stanzie, Semhal, Jo Hannah Katz, Hebrom, Amanual.

  

More Photos

Amanual Abate
Amanual Abate
Amanual Abate
Amanual Abate
By Michael Phillis/Staff Writer
Posted Sep 03, 2010 @ 10:00 AM

Amanual Abate was on his way home from track practice last January when his adopted mother, Jo Hannah Katz, handed him what she said was a late Christmas present.

“I thought it was a stupid card or something,” said Amanual, 19, now a senior at Lexington High School.

It wasn’t a card. Katz had managed to track down a phone number, which would connect Amanual with his twin brother and some of his other siblings back in Ethiopia — siblings he had not seen or heard from in more than seven years.

During their first two-hour long conversation, Amanual and his twin brother, Adinew Belay, reminisced about their childhood in Ethiopia, each scarcely believing the person on the other end of the phone was really his brother.

“We talked about everything,” Amanual said.

Adinew had been told Amanual had died, and was shocked to learn he was alive and living in Lexington with an adopted family, having immigrated to the United States about three years ago.

Until that fateful phone call, Amanual had no real knowledge of his family. But from that point on, Amanual began doing whatever he could to help his family, sending the money he earned as a cashier at Stop & Shop to support his siblings back in Ethiopia.

 

A new home

Amanual came to the United States in January 2007 with his father, his father’s wife, and their children, but he recognizes he could easily have been the one to stay in Ethiopia, while Adinew went on to the U.S.

According to Amanual, one day his father said he was going to take one of his sons with him to Boston but not both.

“Me and my twin brother, we slept in the same bed. We bonded together,” Amanual said.

Amanual’s father wanted to figure out which of his twin sons would get along better with his wife.

“He asked people and had a meeting about who was the nicest,” said Amanual. “I was the nicest kid and he took me with him.”

Amanual said he had only three or four days to prepare for what he believed would only be a few months away from his family. Adinew followed Amanual silently as he left the house — the two did not speak again for seven years.

Upon arriving in the U.S., Amanual’s family moved around, living in Dorchester, Roxbury, and South Boston.

Amanual and his father disagreed about priorities — Amanual wanted to focus on his education and running track, but his father wanted him to come home after school and babysit. Tensions mounted and before long, it became clear Amanual would not be welcome in his home once he turned 18.

Katz, a second-grade teacher at Bridge Elementary in Lexington, got to know Amaunal through the St. Michael’s Ethiopian Orthodox Church in Boston, where she and her four adopted Ethiopian children were active.

Katz said the church was an important part of her adopted children’s lives — her son Dawit went to church three times a day when he lived in Ethiopia.

“One of the first things we did was go to an Ethiopian Orthodox church,” she said. “That became a huge network for them.”

Katz often offered Amanual rides home from church.

“He was deeply respectful,” she said. “He was always reading and would tell me about current events.”

Recognizing Amanual was in a bad situation at home, Katz invited him to spend Christmas with her family. Soon after, she met with her family to discuss the idea of adopting Amanual.

“I knew [Amanual’s] circumstances and that’s what he needed. I sat everybody down and I said, ‘What does everybody want to do?’ They all agreed adoption was the right option,” she said. “He was joining our family and he was our son, and that was it.”

 

Providing for his family

Since reconnecting with his family in Ethiopia, Amanual’s life has changed dramatically. The knowledge that his family is still alive and in need of his help has put considerable pressure on Amanual.

“I try to get over it. Mostly, I just put on my iPod,” he said. “I think a lot of things. I get very stressed ... I imagine I’m there with them.”

Amanual learned one of his 11 siblings, an older brother, had died of asthma. He also found out Adinew was suffering from yellow fever.

According to the World Health Organization, yellow fever is an acute viral disease, which causes about 30,000 deaths a year. Up to 50 percent of those severely affected by the disease die if not treated.

Adinew is one of 15 percent of patients who suffer a more acute phase of the disease. About half of these patients die within the first two weeks, but Adinew has survived.

“He tells me he is doing OK,” said Amanual. “He never wants me to be worried about him. He doesn’t want me to send him money.”

Earlier this year, Amanual’s family held a fundraiser, aided by the LHS track team, raising approximately $3,000 to help Amanual visit his family in Ethiopia.

“The money came out of nowhere,” he said. “When school was over, I thought I could spend the money for airfare and give [Adinew] treatments.”

Amanual had a list in his room where he had written all the various things he was looking forward to doing once he saw his family. Along with the list, he kept a chart to count down the days until his probable departure.

Ultimately, Amanual decided to defer the trip to next year so he could continue sending money to pay for Adinew’s medical care.

“I don’t want to go there and see them, come back, and then [have him] die because he didn’t get any treatment,” he said.

According to Amanual, the long-term prognosis of his brother, especially if his situation and living conditions do not improve, is unknown. Survival depends on the availability of medicine, good diet and living conditions. Right now, medical costs for Adinew are higher because he lives in a small residence without electricity or water.

Amanual hopes to buy his family a new house with electricity and plumbing.

Katz estimates that in addition to $150 a month for food and supplies, Amanual would need to raise about $20,000 to buy a house in Ethiopia. Katz said the house would be very modest, but still a significant step up.

“The prognosis for a longer life is better if there is a clean, safe, dry environment and better nutrition,” Katz said.

To support Amanual’s efforts, Katz and family friend Yuval Ramon are organizing a 10K charity run in Lexington on Sept. 19. Their initial fundraising goal is $5,000.

“With $5,000, it can set them up for a good year,” Katz said.

In addition to Adinew, Amanual is helping his sister, who is 17, recently married and a new mom, to finish school. The money he sends also helps three other siblings meet their basic needs.

With the weight of his family’s future on his shoulders, Amanual said he is staying focused on his goal.

“Most people here want to have fun; I don’t care much about it,” he said. “When I think about myself and my problem, I work.”

Entering his senior year at LHS, Amanual said he hopes to run track, graduate, go to community college, and then on to a four-year college to study sociology.

Portugal child sex abuse 'proved'

3 September 2010 Last updated at 12:09 GMT

Portugal child sex abuse 'proved'

Railings outside the Casa Pia college of Pina Manique in Lisbon (1 September 2010)Abuse at Casa Pia is said to have started in the mid-1970s, but was not discovered until 2002

Seven defendants in a paedophilia trial in Portugal have been found guilty of sexually abusing children in the care of a network of state-run homes.

The six men and one woman include Carlos Cruz, a former TV presenter, and Jorge Ritto, a former ambassador.

Minister Kenney’s visit to France, India, China, and the Philippines to focus on greater international cooperation on shared imm

News Release

Minister Kenney’s visit to France, India, China, and the Philippines to focus on greater international cooperation on shared immigration concerns

Ottawa, September 3, 2010 — Citizenship, Immigration and Multiculturalism Minister Jason Kenney leaves tomorrow for an official visit to Europe and Asia.

On the Minister’s agenda are visits to Paris, New Delhi, Chandigarh, Hong Kong, Beijing and Manila. He will participate in meetings as part of the Government of Canada’s commitment to work with foreign governments to improve international cooperation on shared immigration concerns. Minister Kenney’s trip will focus on encouraging countries that are major sources of immigration to Canada to implement and enforce meaningful regulation of fraudulent immigration activity, such as marriages of convenience and crooked immigration consultants.

The visit will begin in Paris, where the Minister will meet the French minister responsible for immigration and various European ministers and discuss issues of common concern, including illegal immigration, border security, human trafficking and smuggling, and the resettlement of refugees.

Welcome Seyhan & Reyhan! Adoption Update (Bulgaria)

Thursday, September 2, 2010
Its update time and boy do we have some GREAT news to share! But first, let's start from the beginning....

Darryl and I started filing paperwork to adopt back in November of last year--about 10 months ago. When we filed for the adoption we had every intent of filling for one child. However, the social worker suggested that we put one to two children on the application... just in case! So we listened and put down one to two male children...just in case...
Ever since that day Darryl and I have felt that God would place two more children into our family. But I thought, na! There is no way they will find two boys together under the age of four! After all, two children are not on my radar...(But God had other plans! His radar and mine were different ). After a few months past we finished our paperwork and were told that it would be another year before we received a referral. So we prepared ourselves for the wait. But there was something inside of me that kept saying, "Its sooner than you think...Its sooner than you think..."
Then GOD happened..... An email came through from our adoption agency stating that there were brothers who needed to be adopted. One of the boys, Reyhan, is age 2 and the other, Seyhan, is age 3. These brothers needed a home and soon! Well the email went out to an entire group of people, including us. But once I saw the picture of the two boys, my heart leaped, and I knew deep down that these boys were ours! We feel in love! And Instantly God whispered... "there yours". But I thought, "Lord there are two!" God whispered, "there yours, I already told you two were coming." We were filled with joy.
So we emailed the agency and told them we wanted to look into the boys file. But sadly the boys had already been adopted out by another family. We were told that if that family canceled we would be next in line. So we waited days and it seemed to take forever...
Then GOD happened again...Something happened... THE FAMILY CANCELED.... and the boys were ours!! They were Ours! We were full of joy, nervous, and scared all at once... BUT--Oh yes there's a BUT--the agency was soon informed that there were now three other families who wanted to adopt the boys and since these families had been waiting longer then us, they got bumped up in line ahead of us and we got pushed back! We had gone from 2nd in line to 1st then to 4th! How does that happen? I was on a roller coaster of emotions! In fact we all were. Lord, "I thought you said they were ours?...Lord?" We were so ready to fight for these boys!! And I can't even begin to tell you what was going through my mind! But none the less it's in God's hands. And we must trust Him for that!
Then when we finally came to grips with ourselves and gave it all over to God. The phone rang....(seriously...within seconds from when we gave it over to God the phone rang!)
And then GOD happened yet again.... Our agency called and told us after reviewing the files of the 4 families. They decided that our family is the best fit for these children. Usually they do not move families ahead of others, but in this case they did! They thought these kids fit our profile perfectly!!!
So please join us in welcoming our TWO SONS/Brothers... Our GIFTS from GOD!Reyhan Age 2 (he is in the blue). Seyhan Age 3 (he is in the white and orange)



On another note, please believe me when I say there is a lot more to the story, but for sake of space, you got the shorter version. God is so good and we are excited already!
 
By the way did I happen to mention that Ayva was praying for 'one brother for her, and one for Tessa?' God hears the prayers of the little ones doesn't He!
As for the boys names, we are not sure at the moment what we are going to do. Reyhan and Seyhan are there Bulgarian names, which we plan to keep somewhere in their names.
So What does that Mean Now?
This means that we travel soon to meet our two precious sons! We are required by Bulgaria to first fly down to file paper work, then 4-5 months later we will make a second flight to pick up our sons.
This also means that because there are two children now, instead of one, the price has gone from $33,000 to about $45,000, with only a few months left to raise it in. I am pleased to say that God has already brought us up to the $30,000 mark! God is good! So we are currently short about $15,000 (the cost of the second adoption).
We know God has brought us this far and He will continue to bring us through to completion! Please pray with us that God will continue to provide financially for this adoption, we know we serve a Mighty God!
Upcoming Fundraiser!
**In order to raise funds to bring home our 2 sons we will be having another Fundraiser Garage Sale on October 8th & 9th. We are asking for donations and will except anything: new, old, large, or small. We'll take it all. :) This is a huge way you can help support our adoption.
Please remember to keep our family in your prayers, as well as our sons in Bulgaria. Thank you all for continuing to embark on this journey with us, and please join us in this joyous moment! We will continue to keep you updated as we get information in and your updates will come a little more often now that we are on the 'fast track'.
“Remember the words of the Lord Jess, how he said, ‘It is more blessed to give than to receive.’” Acts 20:35
If you would like to donate to the cause, you can make a tax deductable donation to: Kingdom Kids Adoption Agency at 1417 North Lincoln Street Spokane, WA 99201. You can mail it directly to them or contact them at (509) 465-3520. 90% of the proceeds go directly to the adoption fund. Please Do Not write our name on the check. Please Do include a slip of paper stating that you would like to donate the amount to: the Hill Family Fund. You can also do this on their webpage atwww.kingdomkidsadoption.org.