Haiti judge recommends freeing US missionaries
The missionaries have said they were not trying to kidnap the children |
A judge has recommended that 10 US missionaries detained in Haiti for alleged child smuggling should be freed while the case is investigated.
They deny allegations that they tried to smuggle 33 children across the border to the Dominican Republic.
The group said they were taking the children to an orphanage.
But it has since emerged that some of the youngsters' parents are still alive, and many came from the same village.
The judge, Bernard Sainvil, says the missionaries should be provisionally released while he looks into the case.
According to Reuters news agency, the judge said he had signed the request for the release of the 10 Americans and sent it to the prosecutor's office.
The judge has the power to drop the charges at any time.
Better life
He says he made the decision after listening to evidence from some of the parents, who said they had no food or water to give their children.
They said they willingly gave up the youngsters because they believed they would have a better life with the missionaries.
The group's leader, Laura Silsby, has said her group had met a Haitian pastor by chance when it arrived in the country, and that he had helped them gather the children. She also admitted that the missionaries did not have the proper paperwork.
"Our intent was to help only those children that needed us most, that had lost either both their mother and father, or had lost one of their parents and the other had abandoned them," she has said from her jail cell.
The children, who are aged from two to 12, were later taken into care in the Haitian capital Port-au-Prince.
The Haitian prime minister has warned that the case is a "distraction" from earthquake recovery.
Jean-Max Bellerive said last week that the case of the missionaries risked diverting international attention from the plight of Haitians who had lost their homes and livelihoods.
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Comments UAI:
Who does not remember the so-called charity l’Arche de Zoe whom tried to kidnap children from Chad for intercountry adoption. After conviction in Chad, the French government, a Europen Country with difficult transparency in their adoption procedures and figures and very much pro-adoption, got them out of Prison and nobody heard from this case and the offenders since.
It seems, that if the intention of adoption, does free people of the act itself. This also has to do with the fact, that international criminal law does not pursue to make the act of childtrafficking for adoption punishable while the international community believes that the intention of adoption is not a matter of exploitation but serves the best interest of the child. Even when a child is stolen and traded, the international criminal law accepts the final receiver, the adopters as legitimate owners of the child.
The act of reception, which is in many laws an offence or criminal act if the receiver could have suspected/known that the object, was probably traded/processed under suspicious circumstances, the receiver is also punishable. But in the case of adoption the 'traders' and the receivers of children (sujects) are free to go, because the final destination was in the best interest of the child. No further question asked.
This reality of intercountry adoption, how children are tracked down, recruited and processed, should create an outrageous response. But the international community is silent as ever and the adoptionlobby hopes that these examples, just a few popped up in the media, dies in silence, so the international adoption-caravan can be continued.
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