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Laatste nieuws adoptieprocedures Ethiopië

19-11-2009 - Laatste nieuws adoptieprocedures Ethiopië
Vorige week is een delegatie van het Ministerie van Justitie, Stichting Afrika en Wereldkinderen in Ethiopië geweest voor overleg. Er zijn gesprekken geweest met tehuizen, het Ministerie van Women’s Affairs (MOWA), de Nationale Ombudsman en kinderrechtenorganisaties. Het bezoek is door de delegatie als constructief en positief ervaren. Het ministerie MOWA in Ethiopië heeft in de afgelopen weken zelf ook onderzoek gedaan naar verschillende tehuizen en adoptieprocessen. Het ministerie MOWA heeft aangegeven dat de uitkomst van dit onderzoek op korte termijn kan worden verwacht. Het Ministerie van Justitie zal de uitkomst van de gesprekken in een advies verwerken aan de minister. Dit rapport wordt eveneens op korte termijn verwacht.
 

Kyrgyzstan launches 194 proceedings on illegal child adoption

Kyrgyzstan launches 194 proceedings on illegal child adoption

18/11-2009 14:24, Bishkek – News Agency “24.kg”, By Ivan DONIS

At least 194 criminal proceedings on illegal child adoption have been launched in Kyrgyzstan, Elmurza Satybaldiev, Prosecutor General of the republic told journalists on Wednesday.

As of today, over 30 cases were reportedly opened in the country. As to Satybaldiev, only seven persons figures in the proceedings, while the cases were opened against notary offices, wardship agencies and some officials.

Speaking about child trafficking, the prosecutor general outlined, that no cases have been initiated on the article in Kyrgyzstan as of today.

Reisverslag 2: Nelson, dokter, koffiebonen

Reisverslag

Kenia

Yvette!, 18 november 2009

Kenia , Thika 28°

Reisverslag 2: Nelson, dokter, koffiebonen

Adoption Of Little Girl Takes Nearly 4 Years

Nov 17, 2009 7:25 am US/Eastern
Adoption Of Little Girl Takes Nearly 4 Years
Reporting
Eileen Curran
SUGAR HILL, N.H. (WBZ) ?
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1 of 1Ali Kern
WBZ
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A New Hampshire family has waited a long time to adopt a baby girl; so long in fact, the baby is now nearly four years old and speaks only Spanish.

"The emotional process she's having to go through being plucked from her life as she knows it, might as well have been Mars the difference between there and here," said adoptive father Jason Kern.

When Kern and his wife Lisen began the process of adopting the infant girl they named Ali from Guatemala in 2006, they never thought it would take this long.

Chinese culture embraced by Canadian adoptive family

Chinese culture embraced by Canadian adoptive family
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2009-11-17 10:25

Evelyn raises awareness of adoption

Evelyn raises awareness of adoption

Evelyn raises awareness of adoption

Evelyn Robinson at her Christies Beach home.

EVELYN Robinson felt she had very little choice when she fell pregnant as a 19-year-old university student in Edinburgh in 1969.

Close to finishing her Arts degree, struggling to make ends meet and sharing a small two-room house, Ms Robinson was told she couldn’t raise a child alone.

So, she decided to give up her baby for adoption.

“One friend who was a medical student who went on to become a doctor actually said to me, ‘If you keep this baby it will turn into a juvenile delinquent’,” she says.

“That was very much the feeling of the time. I felt that not only could I not do it, I shouldn’t do it.”

After giving birth to a boy, Ms Robinson, who now lives in Christies Beach, discharged herself from hospital early to sit her final exams.

She eventually returned to Bermuda, an island off the east coast of the US where she grew up, found work as a teacher, married and had four children.

Giving birth to her first child with her husband, a boy, brought memories of her other son’s birth flooding back. “I was actually thinking, ‘I don’t deserve to have a child’,” she says. “It’s too good to be true that I could get to have a child of my own because I felt so guilty about everything that had happened.”

Ms Robinson moved to South Australia in 1982 and was reunited with her son Stephen Ferguson in 1991 through a Scotland-based adoption organisation. “The four children came with me to the airport and we were all lined up, all five of us,” she recalls of the reunion.

“What he said afterwards was, when he came off the plane and saw these five people all standing there, it was the first time in his life that he saw someone who looked like him.”

She now has a good relationship with Mr Ferguson, who came to live with her while studying teaching at Adelaide University in 2003.

Ms Robinson has worked as an adoption counsellor, spoken at conferences around the world and written two books, with a third to be released this month, titled Adoption Reunion: Ecstasy or Agony?.

To contact Relationship Australia’s (SA) Post-Adoption Support service call 8245 8100 or visit http://www.relationships.com.au

Dutch Parliamentary Question - Teeven - Ethiopia

2009Z21789 Vragen van het lid Teeven (VVD) aan de minister van Justitie over de Nederlandse nationaliteit van adoptiekinderen uit Ethiopië. (Ingezonden 17 november 2009) 1 Weet u dat het voor Nederlandse ouders die een kind uit Ethiopië adopteren en daarvoor officiële goedkeuring hebben verkregen van de rechtbank aldaar in de praktijk moeilijk blijkt te zijn om de Nederlandse nationaliteit voor hun adoptiekind te regelen? Zo ja, bent u van plan hier iets aan te veranderen? 2 Is het waar dat de doorlooptijd van de procedure van de Immigratie- en Naturalisatiedienst (IND) met betrekking tot de adoptie van een kind per regio aanzienlijk kan verschillen? Zo ja, bent u voornemens dit te anders te regelen om zodoende dit te beperken? 3 Bent u ervan op de hoogte dat het voor de adoptieouders niet te bevatten is dat zij in langdurige onzekerheid zitten met betrekking tot de aanvraag van de Nederlandse nationaliteit? Is het niet zo dat bij een adoptiekwestie het belang van het kind voorop dient te staan?

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Deborra-lee Furness pushes for more adoptions

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Deborra-lee Furness pushes for more adoptions

By Jessica Tapp

Posted 1 hour 49 minutes ago

 

Australia's Rudd apologizes to forced child migrants

(Photograph)
Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd (l.) comforts a victim after giving a national apology to the forgotten Australians and former child migrants at a ceremony in the great hall at Parliament House in Canberra on Monday.
Reuters
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Australia's Rudd apologizes to forced child migrants

Australia Prime Minister Kevin Rudd formally apologized to the thousands of institutionalized children and child migrants shipped from Britain to rebuild Australia after World War II. Many were abused.

Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd on Monday apologized to hundreds of thousands of children abused or neglected in institutions, including some 7,000 British children shipped to Australia after World War II. Sometimes called "the orphans of Empire," they received the formal apology after decades of campaigning for recognition. As with his government's previous apologies, many of the victims here welcomed the gesture, while others expressed a desire to see more practical steps taken to overcome their losses.

Inside Parliament House in Canberra, the nation's capital, about 900 of the former child migrants gathered in the audience to hear Mr. Rudd deliver words of contrition. The prime minister told them: "We come together today to offer our nation's apology, to say to you, the forgotten Australians, and those who were sent to our shores as children without their consent, that we are sorry. Sorry that as children you were taken from your families and placed in institutions where so often you were abused. Sorry for the physical suffering, the emotional starvation, and the cold absence of love, of tenderness, of care. Sorry for the tragedy, the absolute tragedy, of childhoods lost."

Among those listening to the apology – which followed one delivered by Mr. Rudd last year to the "Stolen Generations" of Aboriginal children forcibly removed from their families – was Mick Snell, who has bleak memories of his time in a Methodist-run children's home in Sydney.

Mr. Snell arrived in Australia under a postwar plan to empty British orphanages and repopulate the former colony with "good white stock." The children, who were shipped out from 1947-67, believed their parents were dead. In reality, Mr. Snell's unmarried mother had been forced to give him up as a baby. That was the case with many of the "orphans;" others had been placed in care by impoverished families.

Parliamentary inquiries in Britain and Australia in the past decade concluded that physical and sexual abuse were "widespread and systematic" in the institutions, particularly those run by Catholic orders such as the Christian Brothers and Sisters of Mercy. The inquiries heard that many former child migrants, now in their 60s and 70s, are still deeply traumatized.

'For my kids to understand'

For some, Rudd's apology – which was also extended to Australian children who were abused and neglected in institutions – was a step forward. Speaking before traveling to Canberra, Snell said: "All I want is for them to admit it was wrong, and for my kids to be able to understand me a bit better."

For others, the gesture represented too little, too late. "I wonder how they think making an apology can right the wrong that was done," said Jean Costello.

Ms. Costello was just seven when she was sent to an orphanage in Perth run by the Sisters of Mercy. She had left England with expectations of a country where "everyone was black and there'd be animals hopping down the street."

The reality wasn't what she had imagined. Of her new home, Costello recalls: "It was a very hard, very cold sort of environment, and you learnt very early that it was easier to toe the line than go against it. The nuns were pretty free and easy with the strap, and you didn't have to do much to merit a beating."

Coming British apology?

Redress has been slow, and piecemeal. In recent years, several Australian state governments have apologized, as has the Catholic Church. Some states have offered compensation and counseling services; in others, services have been virtually non-existent. Both Britain and Australia provided funds to help people travel back to Britain to trace their families, but the money was limited and many missed out.

Some migrants learned that their parents had tried to seek them, without success – either because their names were changed when they arrived in Australia, or because parents were told by British authorities that their children were dead or had been adopted by wealthy families.

Returning to Britain, Costello found out – too late – that both her parents had lived well into their 70s. Of those responsible for her welfare, she says: "They deprived me of ever knowing my mum and dad."

There are calls for Britain to apologize, too – and, after years of turning a deaf ear, the government recently hinted that it may follow Australia's example.

Some good intentions

Yet historical records suggest that the policy of sending children to the other side of the world stemmed at the time from good intentions. Britain believed they would fare better than in cash-starved orphanages at home. Australia, meanwhile, was desperate to rebuild its population after suffering heavy war casualties. The children were cheap to house, and a ready source of labor.

And, importantly for Australia, they were white; this was an era when Australia feared being overwhelmed by "Asian hordes" from neighboring countries.

The institutions, though, were not properly inspected, and staff were mostly untrained and poorly supervised. The official inquiries heard that funds provided by the government for the children's upkeep were sometimes used to feed staff well, while the children were given scraps.

The homes also attracted pedophiles. Many children – the exact proportion is unknown – have said they were sexually abused. Others have described miserable, lonely lives, during which birthdays and Christmases went unmarked, and they never received any affection.

Laurie Humphreys, a former migrant, says: "We're all survivors, but emotionally it's had a long-lasting effect. It has affected our relationships; many of us have been divorced, and people have turned to alcoholism. People's lives have been ruined by what's happened to them."

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