Sabtu, 29 Mei 2010

INDIA - NETHERLANDS - RAHUL CASE CONTINUES - DUTCH GOVERNMENT SILENT ABOUT THE SITUATION


A Chennai slum dweller's fight for her Dutch son

Jaya Menon, TNN, May 28, 2010, 03.15am IST

Tags:Chennai|Madras High Court|Rohit Shivam Bissesar|ZwolleLelystad|director of ACT|fight for dutch son|Chennai slum dweller

CHENNAI: On June 15, when Nagarani Kathirvel leaves the squalor of a Chennai slum for the first time and appears in a court hall in Zwolle-Lelystad in the Netherlands, she would still be a long way from the end of her bitter, traumatic struggle. But it would be a beginning — to establish in a foreign court of law that she is the mother of a 12-year-old Dutch boy. About 10 years ago, Rohit Shivam Bissesar was Satheesh Kumar, a toddler living in the Pulianthope slums, that is, until he was kidnapped and given away in adoption to a Dutch couple. Earlier this month, a court in the town of Lelystad in the Netherlands summoned her to appear before it.

"Nagarani has been directed to appear before the court of Zwolle-Lelystad at 3.30pm on June 15. The proceedings will be held behind closed doors," Maaike Junte, a spokesperson for the court, told TOI from the town of Zwolle. It is a victory of sorts for the 35-year-old woman but it has come after hard battles both in courts in Chennai and the European nation. Only a month ago, her plea for a DNA test to establish that Rohit was her son was rejected by a fast-track court there. Going along with views of the special curator appointed for Rohit, the fast-track court in Zwolle-Lelystad decided "it was not in the interest of the child to know its roots."

Against Child Trafficking (ACT), a Netherlands-based organization fighting Nagarani's case, reacted rather strongly. Said Roelie Post, director of ACT, "It is totally unacceptable that five years after the Indian authorities discovered that this child was kidnapped and allegedly sold for inter-country adoption to a family in the Netherlands, the Dutch ministry of justice has done little to sort this out. The ministry of justice seems to be hiding behind procedures and formalities and appears to have totally lost sight of the tragedy the Indian parents are living (through)."

But even as high drama is being played out in the Dutch courts, Nagarani's case relating to her plea to be reunited with her son has been moving at snail's pace in the Madras high court. Since September 2007, when it was entrusted with the case, the CBI has been grappling with what it claims is the "intransigent attitude" of foreign governments. The investigating agency has taken up three cases of abducted children (including that of Nagarani) given up for adoption abroad. "We sent letters rogatory (a formal communication to competent authorities for investigation in foreign countries) to the US, Australia and Netherlands about two years ago. We finally received a reply from the Netherlands. But the correspondence is in Dutch and we have not been able to proceed further," said a CBI source.

The story of Nagarani goes a long way back to a balmy night in October 1999 when the family rolled out their mats on the hard mud road in the Pulianthope colony and decided to sleep under the stars.

DUTCH LINKS

Kamis, 27 Mei 2010

USA - HAITI - Failure to complete the adoption paperwork ?

US senators unveil plan to aid Haiti orphans

WASHINGTON — Three US senators on Wednesday unveiled a bill to clear away hurdles to citizenship for roughly 1,000 Haitian orphans whose adoptions by US parents were rushed because of a January earthquake.

US and Haitian authorities cleared the children to join their adoptive parents after the disaster. But without the complete paperwork necessary to finalize their adoptions, a roadblock has been raised to what would normally be automatic US citizenship upon entry into the United States.

"The unprecedented devastation has turned the adoption process upside down, where it could take years before these children could have any legal status," said Democratic Senator Kirsten Gillibrand.

"In this moment of great uncertainty, we must clear the gridlock and ensure that these children have the legal protections that they deserve," she added.

Gillibrand was joined by fellow Democratic Senator Mary Landrieu and Republican Senator James Inhofe in unveiling the plan.

"This bill will alleviate the legal burden facing the adoptive parents of this group of orphans, and finally bring needed relief as these adoptive families begin their lives together," said Inhofe.

The children were allowed into the United States through humanitarian parole visas and formally deemed orphans by Haitian authorities, but failure to complete the adoption paperwork could result in a years-long wait before they can get legal resident status.

The legislation would enable US Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano to allow parents who are US nationals to apply immediately on their adopted children's behalf to become legal permanent residents and ultimately qualify for citizenship.

VIETNAM - a fee table for adoption according to the Hague Convention ?


Law on Adoption brought into line with international practices

Ha Noi — According to the latest version of the draft law on adoption, only children under 16 years can be offered for adoption.

The National Assembly Standing Committee, the provision would be congruent with the country's legal system and international laws.

During their discussion of the adoption law yesterday in the capital city, NA deputies also touched upon the termination of the relationship between the adoptive parents and adopted children.

"Emancipation is only acceptable when a child reaches the age of maturity," stated the draft law.

Deputy Nguyen Minh Hong, from Nghe An Province, did not agree with the provision that children should only be adopted by foreign couples when there are no Vietnamese parents who want to adopt them.

"We should be most concerned with the child's welfare and whether the child is being cared for or not," said Hong.

Pham Thuong Luong, from Yen Bai Province, proposed that the law should have a provision prohibiting immediate relatives like grandparents or siblings adopt their family member.

"Such an act is popular with ethnic minorities," said Luong.

Nguyen Thi Kim Thuy, from Da Nang, agreed with Article 12 of the draft law which specifies a fee table for adoption.

"This is a very sensitive issue that's why everything should be transparent, particularly the fee so we can avoid the problem of child trafficking," said Thuy.

Minister of Justice Ha Hung Cuong said the fee was congruent with the 1993 La Haye Convention on adoption.

Some deputies questioned the Standing Committee's view that the State must take responsibility for public postal services through one of its enterprises when the parliament debated the draft Postal Services Law yesterday.

The deputies argued that as Viet Nam had joined the World Trade Organisation, more than one enterprise should be given the job of providing public postal services to create healthy competition.

But the committee responded that given the prevailing reality in Viet Nam, it was reasonable for the State to designate an enterprise to supply postal services and benefit from specific policies intended to help it.

The size and development of the postal network was limited and it was still necessary for the State to compensate it for its losses, the committee said.

Information and Communications Minister Le Doan Hop explained that delivery of a letter cost VND3,500 but the price of a stamp was just VND1,000.

There was not a non-State-owned company with the personnel and facilities to provide a nation-wide service, he said. It would be difficult for the State to manage the activities of such a company and the quality of the services, together with the people's interests, would suffer.

Communal system

Deputy Nguyen Viet Lenh, central Binh Dinh Province, and deputy Nguyen Thanh Tam, southern Tay Ninh Province, said more research into the development of the communal postal-service system should be done to ensure its efficiency.

The law governing the management of postal services should be strengthened and violators punished, added deputy Tam.

Deputy Nguyen Lan Dung, Central Highland Dak Lak Province, said rural dwellers go short of newspapers but if the communal system was built scientifically, the people's right to information would be assured. — VNS

Rabu, 26 Mei 2010

NETHERLANDS - Adoptees requested for interview by Dutch Review Committee


HISTORIC FILES

Once a while we 'reprint' older articles to keep attention of practices which are still not cleared yet. Many times government bodies succeed by the knowledge that journalist forget topics while they are not newsworthy any more. But this does not mean, that the practices of the abuse of childprotection measures or childtrafficking for adoption or exploitation of vulnerable families does not exist anymore. Besides, many times these things does not happen far away, but more often and closer as we think.
United Adoptees International
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UAI - 27 mei 2008 - 18.33 (local time)

Amsterdam - United Adoptees International was samen met Samenwerkingsverband Interlandelijke Geadopteerden (SIG) op 15 mei uitgenodigd voor een hoorzitting van de commissie Kalsbeek. Deze commissie onderzoekt hoe om te gaan met interlandelijke adoptie in de toekomst.

De UAI werd vertegenwoordigd door Hilbrand Westra begin_of_the_skype_highlighting end_of_the_skype_highlighting –voorzitter- en Joan Hansink- vice voorzitter - .

Tijdens de hoorzitting is aan UAI haar mening gevraagd met betrekking tot de volgende onderwerpen: ethische verantwoording adoptie, leeftijdscriteria en verkrijgen na adoptie van de oorspronkelijke naam, aparte wachtlijsten hanteren voor special needs kinderen en voor- en nadelen van het stopzetten van adopties.


De UAI heeft de commissie als volgt geïnformeerd:

Voor- en nadelen interlandelijke adoptie

De UAI is niet tegen interlandelijke adoptie. De heer Westra verwacht echter wel dat interlandelijke adoptie op termijn zal uitdoven, gelet op het subsidiariteitsbeginsel. Het begrip 'institutionalisering' verdient een betere definiëring, omdat de wijze waarop dit gedefinieerd wordt van invloed is op de aantallen kinderen dat niet in een gezin(-sachtige situatie) opgroeit. Zo worden bijvoorbeeld welzijnsprojecten, zoals in Colombia het project 'Wonen bij de buurvrouw' vaak onder instituten gerekend terwijl het om wonen in gezinsverband gaat. Daardoor worden er meer kinderen gelocaliseerd die dan in aanmerking komen voor (interlandelijke) adoptie. UAI neemt o.a. het Haags Adoptieverdrag als uitgangspunt waarin gesteld wordt dat adoptie een laatste redmiddel moet zijn.

Aparte wachtlijsten special needs kinderen

De UAI is van mening dat internationale criteria moet worden geformuleerd voor special needs-kinderen, omdat ook hier de vraagkant een rol speelt. Tevens de ongelijkheid die door deze kwestie optreedt is tegengesteld tegen ‘natuurlijke’ vorm van het ‘krijgen’ van kinderen. Een voorselectie en levensoverschrijdende keuzes dienen niet bij voorbaat in wetten en verdragen te worden geregeld. Het gevaar van preselecties in kader van zogeheten special needs heeft ook bizarre gevolgen dat partijen en zelfs familieleden kinderen verminken om adoptabel te kunnen krijgen. Alleen hierom al is de UAI tegen een dergelijke ontwikkeling.

Leeftijdscriteria bij het aanvragen van de oorspronkelijke naam

Binnen UAI is een dialoog gaande of geadopteerden rond hun 16e of 18e jaar of al eerder hun oorspronkelijke naam terug zouden moeten (kunnen) krijgen, want er is ook de ervaring dat het krijgen van de naam van het gezin waar je bij opgroeit helpt bij het inburgeren in de omgeving waar je woont. De UAI is echter van mening dat de oorspronkelijke naam bij het krijgen van een nieuwe naam niet verloren mag gaan. Daarbij moet worden opgemerkt dat de procedure tot verkrijgen van de oorspronkelijke naam moet worden vergemakkelijkt. Ook verneemt UAI van volwassen geadopteerden bij het aangaan van een samenlevingscontract of huwelijk moeilijkheden ondervinden bij diverse gemeenten in Nederland. Omdat dan vaak een geboorteakte wordt gevraagd die veel geadopteerden niet bezitten.

Ethische verantwoording adoptie

De UAI is van mening dat door opnieuw over ethische vraagstukken in kader van interlandelijk adoptie te gaan hebben, het gevaar ontstaat dat de uitgangspunten in het internationale verdrag van de rechten van het kind (IVRK) en het Haags Adoptie Verdrag ter discussie komen te staan. De UAI ziet op dit moment niet de noodzaak om de discussie rondom interlandelijke adoptie opnieuw te voeren indien de de inhoud en reden van het tot standkomen van adoptie in het algemeen buiten beschouwing wordt gelaten. De UAI neemt genoemde verdragen dan voorlopig ook als uitgangspunt van haar beleid.

Download het gehele rapport. Rapport Commissie Kalsbeek

UK- Stolen children by government ? - PRESENT HISTORY

HISTORIC FILES

Once a while we 'reprint' older articles to keep attention of practices which are still not cleared yet. Many times government bodies succeed by the knowledge that journalist forget topics while they are not newsworthy any more. But this does not mean, that the practices of the abuse of childprotection measures or childtrafficking for adoption or exploitation of vulnerable families does not exist anymore. Besides, many times these things does not happen far away, but more often and closer as we think.

United Adoptees International
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Last updated at 11:51 14 May 2005

It is a world of terrifying shadows, which thank God most of us will never know: a world of all-powerful officials, secret courts, stolen children and ruined lives; a world where love has no place and the vulnerable have no voice.

Today in the Daily Mail we reveal the profoundly disturbing details of how decent people can be caught up in a nightmare they don't understand, how happy, cared-for children can be torn from their mothers and given to strangers and how a remorseless administrative machine insists it's all for the best.

No, this isn't a story from the dark days of Soviet dictatorship. This is happening in civilised, liberal Britain, where parents have no rights at all if they don't measure up to the standards of intelligence deemed appropriate by social workers.

And it doesn't matter if your children are loved, well-nourished and properly clothed. It doesn't matter if they are content and cared for in a stable, hardworking environment.

They are still liable to be snatched from you and put into the cold 'care' of the local council if you happen to have learning difficulties or a lower than average IQ, whatever your other qualities.

Somehow, without any publicity or popular consent, the social work establishment has set itself up as the supreme arbiter of good parenthood. And the consequences are devastating.

Take the positively Kafkaesque case we reported last Saturday, involving a couple who are utterly distraught at the way their very young daughter and her baby brother were confiscated and sent for adoption. The reason? Social workers in Essex claim the couple are too "slow" to be parents.

But this was a happy, secure family. The children were loved and kept clean, well-dressed and well-fed. Moreover, their father has held down a job in the same company for 22 years.

None of that seemed to matter to the thought police of Essex. They worried that the mother had a low IQ. And having sent an army of social workers into the family home, they solemnly concluded that she took too long to brush her teeth and had difficulty preparing meals (though the children's father did much of the cooking).

To cap it all, this outrage was originally shrouded in shameful secrecy.

The Family Court, which heard the case, doesn't sit in public. And a bullying Essex County Council threatened an injunction against a brave local councillor who dared to raise questions.

Fortunately, Barry Aspinell refused to be cowed into silence, which is why this appalling case is now in the public domain. But as our report today reveals, the scandal isn't confined to Essex.

All over the country, families are being cruelly torn apart not for the welfare of children, but because social workers are following a politically correct, bureaucratically convenient agenda.

After all, isn't it cheaper and simpler to put children up for adoption than to spend money supporting parents with learning difficulties? And anyway, doesn't the social work establishment tend to think the state always knows best?

The aching sadness in all this is that while loving families are being crushed, cases of genuine child abuse too often go unnoticed or ignored until it is too late. Can anyone forget the deaths of Maria Colwell, Jasmine Beckford, little Victoria Climbie and so many others betrayed by social workers?

The best way to protect children is through the love and security of two parents and a stable home. And that doesn't take brains. It takes care and commitment and responsibility. That is the lesson of human experience.

How tragic that officialdom seems incapable of grasping it.

Comments: Scandal of the stolen children by Fiona Barton May 14th 05

Nigeria - how children do end up in orphanages


Police Rescue Stolen Babies in Asaba

25 May 2010


Lagos — The Delta Police Command has uncovered an illegal orphanage where it claimed that babies are sold at Usonia Street in Asaba, the state capital.

Mr. Charles Muka, the Command's spokesman, said the orphanage, known as Mary's Perpetual Help Orphanage, is owned by one Johnmary Ihueze.

Muka told the News agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Asaba on Monday that Ihueze, who was nabbed by the police after a tip off, "also keeps pregnant girls who are coerced into signing off their babies upon delivery in an affidavit."

"Upon his arrest, six pregnant girls, among them a 14-year-old, was also discovered. Through interrogation, a one-month old baby girl was recovered at Motherless Babies Home, Obosi, in Anambra.

"The pregnant girls have been evacuated to a Shelter for Victims of Domestic Violence and Abuse in Asaba for rehabilitation," he said.

In another development, Muka said the police also exhumed two unidentified corpses in an uncompleted building on Benin-Asaba Expressway after a tip off by the contractor handling the building.

He said that efforts were being made to trace the perpetrators of the act, while the bodies had been deposited at the Federal Medical Centre, Asaba, for autopsy.

Similarly, the police also rescued six girls from human traffickers at Ekpan in Uwvie Local Government Area (LGA), of Delta.

"The police, on receiving the report, swung into action and arrested a native doctor and seven other suspects," Muka said.

According to Muka, the native doctor gives the girls "some spirit bath" preparatory for "their journey abroad."

He said the suspects, who are assisting the police in their investigation, would soon appear in court.

Copyright © 2010 Daily Champion. All rights reserved. Distributed by AllAfrica Global Media (allAfrica.com).

AllAfrica - All the Time

SPAIN - Selling poor Children

Periodismo Humano:

Se venden niños pobres para padres ricos


Selling poor children to rich parents

“There wouldn't be so many children in orphanages if there weren't so many people ready to pay so much money for them”

"Those who pay too much, and 20.000 euros is too much, contribute to maintaining a corrupted system"

"There is no better place for a child than the one where s/he was born"

Later and later: our society tends to postpone the moment to have children. Come first the career, travelling, then the difficult task of finding the perfect partner. “And, all of a sudden, one gets to thirty something and realizes that is it not so easy any more and s/he has to go for adoption if s/he wants to become a parent”, explains Rudi Tarneden, spokesperson to UNICEF Germany.

Getting in their forties, many do not want to wait for 10 years so that they can be « attributed » in their country a « minor in a difficult situation » and whose biological parents still preserve their rights over the her/him. “Moreover”, continues Tarneden, “family planning policies, extensive use of contraceptives and social protection to single mothers kept reducing the number of children available for adoption in our countries ”.
This is how looking for children abroad becomes attractive and many go for it. There also demand is bigger than the offer, however, international agencies promise children very rapidly. It is true that going abroad is expensive: 10.000, 20.000, 30.000 euros. But, how could we put a price on the desire to form a family?
There was a big increase in the last 30 years in the number of families from rich countries interested in adopting children (boys and girls) from other countries. At the same time, lack of regulations and monitoring mechanisms, particularly in the countries of origin, as well as possibility to earn a lot of money in the environment of international adoptions, were an incentive for an industry focused on adoptions, in which the priority is financial benefits against the best interest of the children. Among the abuses encountered count sequestration and selling boys and girls, intimidation of parents and bribery. UNICEF, 2007.
“There are parents who believe that their children go study abroad for a while, and they realize only afterwards that they have given up all their rights over them and that the children will never get back. There are mothers who are living through difficult times and they leave the children to the State, in foster homes and when they come to take them back it appears that they have disappeared, that they have been given for adoption to a family living abroad”, lists Roelie Post begin_of_the_skype_highlighting end_of_the_skype_highlighting, director of the organisation Against Child Trafficking. The cases of kidnapped minors, biological parents misled, of altered documents, illegal payments, corrupted doctors and judges pile up on the shelves of NGOs.
According to calculations, there are around twenty States worldwide which allow for their minors to be adopted by couples living in another country. The exact figure is not known as formal complaints oblige constantly to suspend the practice in certain countries, meanwhile the pressure of demand makes other States accept to give their children away transnationally. But one thing is clear, says Tarneden, “the direction is one-way: the poor send off, the rich receive and nowadays it is practically impossible to tell if the process was legal and the minor's rights were respected”.
“We can doubt that countries like Ethiopia, which already face difficulties in controlling corruption in all fields, are able to guarantee that no irregularities occur in what adoptions are concerned”, notes Bernd Wacker, ex member of Terre des Hommes Germany international adoptions expert. On the other hand, authorities of the receiving countries do not have the capacity nor the expertise required to confirm that everything was legal. And, in reality, nobody is really interested in it, “because – at least this is what happens here, and I suspect that in other places is the same- they think that, anyway, the children are better off here“, says Wacker.
No doubt, the experts agree that there is no better place for a child than the place she/he was born. A minor should be sent abroad only when all the possibilities to be fostered in her/his natural environment are exhausted, i.e. it is not possible to contribute so that her/his biological parents care for her/him nor any relative and there is no national family able to adopt her/him.
“People are very naive”, notices Tarneden, “sometimes, when natural disasters occur in third world countries, they call and ask whether they could not adopt a child from that place. They are acting like this in good faith, but they have no idea what they are asking for, they did not stop for five minutes to think what it supposes to take a small one, who, on the other hand, has just been through a traumatising situation, from an environment that she/he knows and to take her/him to another country, where people speak another language, look differently and totally different customs. More than that they did not even stop for five minutes to think that maybe very probably that child has a family who loves him- a father, a mother, some siblings of whom she/he may not want to be separated. There are people so naïve to think that a child can be happy only with the material welfare that a developed country could offer him”.
“I wouldn't call this being naïve, but colonial type of thinking”, considers Post, “that idea that it is only us who could love a child as much as he deserves, only us to cover his needs as required and that those poor parents from the third world do not know what it is important for a child as we do”.
“People see children in orphanages and feels enormous pity. I say: if there weren't so many international adoptions, there wouldn't be so many children in orphanages. Most of them are there because there is a lot of people ready to pay a lot of money for them”, says Post.
It is calculated that 90 % of the minors subject to international adoptions are not orphans, but they are to be found in foster homes because their parents, at least formally, cannot take care of them. “Where from could have come so many orphan children?”, asks Post, “there have not been wars nor disasters in any of these countries, nor catastrophes. Even the story of the « AIDS orphans » is a lie: if you make a bit of an investigation, it appears always that they have family. If not even Angelina Jolie or Madonna managed to adopt orphans…”
The NGOs could see that when a country suspends for a long period the international adoptions, the numbers of children in the orphanages go down. “There is a lot of money involved, and this is the problem”, says Tarneden. Couples from the « first world » are ready to make whatever financial effort is needed to get the so-much desired child. “But all those who chooses to adopt a child must be aware that paying too much money - and 20.000 euros is too much money- contributes to maitaining a corrupted system which does not act in the best interest of the minor, but is oriented towards financial benefit”.
When someone earns money for an adoption, that is minor trafficking. We should start calling things by their names”, states Post. “Adoptions should not be governed as it is the case now by the rule of offer and demand”, adds Tarneden, “this in not about incriminating the adoptive parents – even they should be aware that, if during the process of adoption illegal practices are involved, they are also committing a crime-. Of course there are cases, at individual level, where international adoption is in the best interest of the child. But, taking into account the general functioning of this practice, it can be unfortunately said that we face systematic sales of poor children with the only objective of satisfying the desires of rich couples”.
UNICEF calculates that every year between 1.000 and 1.500 babies are sold in Guatemala to US or European couples. Before travelling to Central American countries to get the baby, the adoptive parents can see on internet the offer of « babies available » and choose one of them. The biological mother gets some 30 dollars for her son, but the couples pay between 15.000 and 20.000 (USD). UNICEF, 2007.
International adoptions lobby is very powerful. There are very important people and well connected, who gets protection from the highest spheres. I have no idea why and how they do it. The only thing I know is that, in spite of the denunciations, nothing happens to them, that there are always important politicians defending their interests and that, when the pressure is increasing too much and some country prohibits adoptions, they go for the next one. In the end we find the same agencies in all the places”, says Post.
“There were very preoccupying indications of minor trafficking in Nepal. We managed, together with Terre des Hommes, that the country suspends temporarily international adoptions”, tells Tarneden. Starting with this summer, Guatemala may resume sending children abroad, which it has stopped in 2008. “This country has made significant changes in the legislation, which does not mean that now it is a safe place for adoption. 100% safety does not exist”.
“In the beginning I used to say to myself: ‘Roelie, your imagination is perverted’. But in time I have learned that reality beats anything that I could imagine”, concludes the activist, and the UNICEF spokesperson sends a last message to couples who decide to adopt outside their country: “they have to have clear in mind few things. Firstly, that a family with adopted children is a very special type of family. That the children may be ill and that they may preserve memories of their biological parents. That a lot of strength is required to succeed as well as enough tolerance so that one day they could accompany their son to seek his roots, a moment that almost always comes. But that above all, that every child has the right to know the truth. And that if the truth is that ‘you know, that day we paid 20.000 euros for you’, this is something that no family can stand”.
The Hague Convention vs. UN Convention
On 25 May 1993, the Convention of 29 May 1993 on Protection of Children and Co-operation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption entered into force. The signature of this agreement is frequently used by adoption agencies to measure the seriousness of the countries sending of children for adoption. “For us, the convention is important because it states that the best interest of the child is above all and that its ratification supposes taking a public position”, says Rudi Tarneden, spokesperson to UNICEF Germany, “but, undoubtedly, this documents is quite flawed and it cannot be said to guarantee the protection of minors”.
More than many agree that the main weakness of the Convention is that it does not provide for control measures: nobody controls that its principles are respected.
However, Roelie Post begin_of_the_skype_highlighting end_of_the_skype_highlighting, director of the organisation Against Child Trafficking, goes further in the her criticism towards the text:
The Hague Covent ion acts exclusively like safeguards for the adoptive parents, offers them a legal frameworkConvention on the Rights of the Child. This already regulated the international adoptions and entered into force three years before the Hague Convention, in 1990, which may make one ask why there was necessary to adopt another legislation. The answer is easy: the provisions of the Hague Convention are less strict and more vague – i.e. leaves more room for interpretation- and limits more the rights of the biological parents over their children than the UN Convention.”
, the stamps and the signatures required so that nobody can act legally against the adoption.

There is a document that really defends the rights of the children and that is the UN

Selasa, 25 Mei 2010

Belgium - Aantal adopties in Vlaanderen stijgt

NUMBERS OF INTERCOUNTRY ADOPTION IN FLANDERS INCREASES

Intercountry adoptions by licensed agencies in Belgium (Flanders) increased with 12%. What is interesting is that the numbers of intercountry adoptions where also increased due to the numbers of children from Haiti last year.


Het aantal adopties via erkende diensten is vorig jaar in Vlaanderen toegenomen met 12 procent. Dat meldt de Vlaamse Centrale Autoriteit voor Adoptie dinsdag. Het gaat vooral om kinderen uit het buitenland.

In het jaar 2009 werden 268 kinderen geadopteerd, tegenover 239 in 2008. De stijging is een gevolg van het toegenomen aantal adopties vanuit het buitenland (interlandelijke adoptie). Vorig jaar werden in Vlaanderen immers 244 kinderen vanuit het buitenland geadopteerd, tegenover 210 in 2008. Het aantal binnenlandse adopties liep terug van 29 naar 24. > read more

AUSTRALIA - ICASN, Lynelle has Resigned from ICASN/ICA involvement

Lynelle Beveridge

May 23, 2010 at 8:35am


Well, the time has come for me to say goodbye to the intercountry adoption community. I've created and been involved with ICASN since late 1998 and I now have other challenges and areas that need my energy. It has been a rewarding journey and I've been blessed to personally know many wonderful adoptees, adoptive parents, local birth parents, Govt professionals and non-govt professionals, and others involved in intercountry adoption. Thank you all for your contribution to making ICASN such a success!

The ICASN State Reps will still continue on in their state roles and can now be your central points of contact. I will no longer be updating or maintaining the ICASN website and it will remain in place up until early 2011, unless someone wants to keep it going and pay for the Domain registration.

I would like to take the opportunity to thank Mary Waterhouse/Frost from NMIT in VIC who has kindly hosted the ICASN website free of charge and provided technical support all these years .. without that, ICASN would never have grown from it's original 30 adoptee members in Australia, to today's 500+ in Australia and around the world ... and that's not counting those who joined via Facebook ....

I wish you all well in your journeys and my one hope is that eventually the institution of intercountry adoption will come to embrace and empower the voices of birth families to be heard and have an impact on the policies and processes involved between sending and receiving countries - I see this as the last group who remain unheard & disempowered in the triad for ICA.

I have also resigned from my position on the Federal Government's NICAAG body and hope there will be many adoptees who apply for the position as it's important for our voice to be involved in all levels of Intercountry Adoption.

My email address will cease to exist by 30 June 2010. Both the Facebook & Yahoo groups will be moderated by the ICASN State Reps.

Many thanks
Regards
Lynelle Beveridge begin_of_the_skype_highlighting end_of_the_skype_highlighting

Founder/Director
Inter-Country Adoptee Support Network (ICASN)
http://www.facebook.com/l/1fd75;www.icasn.org/

Mb: +61 411 126 427 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting +61 411 126 427 end_of_the_skype_highlighting
E: icasn@bigpond.net.au
P: PO Box 6550 Baulkham Hills NSW 2153

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Dear Lynelle,

With great regret we have read your resignation of ICASN and also your departure from the Intercountry Adoption activities now we arrive at a new dawn of the history for Adoptees. United Adoptees International has great respect what you have done in Australia to establish a framework for Adoptees and the intervention on political and societal level.

Australia, but also the Adoptee world internationally, will loose with you, an important player in the field of intercountry adoption for the interest of Adoptees in many fields. Your efforts and your contribution to the worldwide dialogue of intercountry adoption in the best interest of the (adult) adoptees will not be forgotten.

We want to thank you for your support and outstanding cooperation and hope that for those who will take over your responsibilities and task, which is hardly to do in our opinion, will cooperate on the same level and with the same diligence as you did with United Adoptees International.

On behalf of the Board & Management United Adoptees International I want to wish you and your family all the best and happiness.

Hilbrand W.S. Westra

Managing Director UAI


Senin, 24 Mei 2010

RUSSIA - Sent to the "Ranch for Kids Project,"

Facing the real issues in international adoption

Russia issues a suspension of adoptions by US families, but the pause may not force agencies and governments alike to tackle the true problems behind the issue.
Facing the real issues in international adoption


Americans adopt between 2,000 and 4,000 children from Russia annually, but six months after one such adoption, a single woman decided she no longer wanted to be Artyom Savelyev’s mother. Sending the 7-year-old boy on a transatlantic flight back to Russia by himself, Torry Hansen set off an international incident that led to a suspension of adoptions of Russian children by Americans.
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The Hansen case, rather than the spark that started the fire, was merely another log on a long-blazing inferno. Artyem Savelyev’s case is just the latest in a series of adoptions of Russian children by Americans that have proven to be far from in the children’s best interest. Since 1996 there have been approximately 16 reported cases of child abuse—burnings, beatings, starving—committed by American adoptive parents to Russian-born children. This abuse has resulted in 12 murder convictions, with three cases currently pending.

In addition, there are an unknown number of Russian-born children no longer living with those who promised to be their parents forever. Some have been sent to the "Ranch for Kids Project," which houses “troubled children adopted primarily from Russia" at locations in Wyoming, Montana and Maryland, according to the website Ranchforkids.org. There is also an underground network of families who take in children that other adopters can no longer “handle,” some claiming they fear for the safety of their families. Joyce Sterkel, 63, who runs the Ranch estimates that approximately 300 children have passed through the facility.

On Again off Again

In 2000, and again in 2003, Russia insisted foreign adoptions be handled only by accredited agencies that would be required to provide Russia with reports including at-home visits by a social worker at six months and one, two, and three years post-placement.

“One of the major problems,” said Alexander Demkin, Russia’s vice consul in New York, is that the adoptive parents obtain American citizenship for the children and cancel their Russian citizenship, which makes it impossible for Russians to follow-up.

In April 2006, the Russian Prosecutor General's Office attempted yet again to take the reigns and prevent further abuses by calling for the revocation of the accreditation of 12 U.S. adoption agencies, stating that the companies had failed to file post-adoption reports on the condition of Russian children.

Now again, adoptions have been suspended and officials have called for a freeze until a bilateral treaty is signed enforcing, among other things, post-adoption monitoring. An American diplomatic delegation visited Moscow and reported that a newly negotiated adoption agreement would soon be signed by both nations, possibly by the end of June.

Some child advocates suggest that in addition to the suggested bilateral agreement, Russia should ratify the Hague Convention on International Adoption to put teeth into any agreements between them and any country receiving Russian children. Another suggestion involves transparency.

Adoptive parents regularly report a lack of full, complete and accurate disclosure of medical history being transmitted from Russian orphanages to American adoption agencies and then to the adopting parents. Some 60 percent of internationally adopted children have health problems, according to Dr. Nancy Curtis, who heads Children’s Hospital of Oakland’s International Adoption Clinic. Dana E. Johnson, M.D., Ph.D. at the University of Minnesota adoption medicine center claims that 85 percent of the children diagnosed with Fetal Alcohol Syndrome were born in Russia, though few receive an official diagnosis of FAS.

American adoption agencies routinely ask prospective adopters what types of disabilities they are and are not willing and able to deal with which creates expectations that their requested criteria will be met. Adoption blogs often feature those who have adopted from Russia lamenting: “I didn’t sign up for this” or “I never would have adopted him had I known.”

The root of the issue

Adoption agencies may fail to adequately prepare adopters and orphanages may downplay the risk for attachment disorders, educational delays, behavioral issues, as well as serious psychological and physical disabilities among institutionalized children, but the reality is that international adoption is big business. Fees average $40,000 per adoption, not including payoffs.

The Russian state pays about $3 billion a year in salaries for orphanage employees. And orphanages provide jobs in many depressed regions. Americans report that adopting from Russia involves payments of large sums of cash in a corrupt bureaucratic system.

“It has one goal, which is to preserve itself,” said Boris L. Altshuler, chairman of Right of the Child, an advocacy group in Moscow, and a member of a Kremlin advisory group.

Child welfare experts from Save the Children, SOS Children’s Village, UNICEF and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child all call for international adoption to be a last resort, used only after exhausting all efforts to keep children with their extended kin, local community, or within the same country, language and culture. However, More than 700,000 Russian children live in orphanages—more than at the end of World War II, and Yelena B. Mizulina, the chairwoman of the parliamentary committee on family and children, recently reported that within Russia during the past three years, more than 30,000 children were sent back to institutions by their adoptive, foster or guardianship families.

The best interests of vulnerable children need to be put first, overriding profiting from their misfortune. Hopefully the international media exposure of Artyom’s solo flight will lead Russia and the United States to enact constructive measures regarding optimal care for children, including prioritizing family preservation, dealing with substance abuse recovery and reduction and increasing domestic adoption.

Mirah Riben is author of The Stork Market: America’s Multi-Billion Dollar Unregulated Industry (2007) and shedding light on…the Dark Side of Adoption (1988) in addition to multiple articles. She is former Director of the American Adoption Congress and has been researching, writing and speaking about adoption issues for more than 30 years.

Ireland - adoption agency which engages in illegal practices should be de-registered


Adoption agencies to be struck off for ‘wrongdoing’

Friday, May 21, 2010

ANY adoption agency which engages in illegal practices should be de-registered and if necessary the case referred to An Garda Síochána, the chairman of the Adoption Board has said.

The issue of illegal adoptions was raised with Geoffrey Shannon following the Irish Examiner’s investigation into the case of Tressa Reeves, whose son was illegally adopted and falsely registered as the natural child of the adoptive parents. This was facilitated by St Patrick’s Guild adoption agency, which remains fully accredited by the Adoption Board, despite the board being aware of the case since 2001.

Speaking on RTÉ’s Prime Time, chairman of the Adoption Board Geoffrey Shannon gave a personal guarantee that any such cases would be investigated and if necessary referred to the relevant authorities.

"I don’t want to become involved in discussing individual cases, but what I am saying is, if anybody has concerns in relation to their individual case, that I am giving a guarantee that their case or cases will be immediately drawn to the attention of the Adoption Board and if there are any concerns emerging from an examination of that case that warrants referral to the gardaí, to the General Register Office or any other statutory body that will happen as a matter of priority," he said.

Mr Shannon said he would recommend to the Adoption Board to de-register agencies engaged in wrongdoing.

"We will do what we can do within the powers laid down in the Adoption Acts. We will have much greater enhanced powers under the forthcoming adoption legislation and hopefully we will be in a better position to provide answers.

"The board has at its disposal the power to de-register an adoption society... it would be my recommendation to the board where wrongdoing has been found on the part of an adoption society, that the board... de-register the adoption society," he said.

Selasa, 18 Mei 2010

Indian Government involved in Adoption Crimes

European Foundation ACT in cooperation with ADVAIT Foundation and Sakhee pursuing cases of Childtrafficking for Intercountry adoption where countries like the Netherlands, Danmark, Belgium, Canada, The US and Australia where involved. But the international community sheers in silence.
Maharashtra officials linked to adoption scam: CBI

Aditya Kaul / DNA

Tuesday, May 18, 2010 0:31 IST






New Delhi: The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) suspects the connivance of government officials with a Pune-based foundation in a racket involving the kidnapping of children of poor families and putting them up for adoption. The agency has booked Joginder Singh Bhasin, managing trustee of the Balwant Kartaar Foundation, also known as Preet Mandir, in this connection.

The CBI, in its FIR against the managing trustee and others, has alleged that between 2002 and 2010, Bhasin and associates kidnapped children belonging to poor families in Maharashtra under a criminal conspiracy.

Preet Mandir has rebutted the allegation and said all its adoption cases followed a judicial process. The CBI’s statement said: “He (Bhasin) used to send the children for inter-country adoption and extorted huge amounts of money from the adopting parents…Plus, he was also into illegal trafficking of children. For this purpose, he had opened a rehabilitation centre at Kanhe Phata,” it added.

The agency filed the FIR after being directed by the Mumbai high court to do so.

Maintaining that the racket could not have thrived for so long without the active support of officials of the state government, the CBI said: “Some officials of the Maharashtra government connived with Bhasin. He managed to traffic children to his rehabilitation centre Kanhe Phata in Pune in violation of existing norms.”

Preliminary investigations have found that Bhasin extorted money from Indian parents. “The amount prescribed in adoptions is Rs25,200 per case. In as many as 70 instances between 2005 to 2010, he charged money in excess of Rs50,000,” the statement added.

Evidence has also emerged that he had misappropriated nearly Rs26 lakh from the Balwant Kartaar foundation during 2002 to 2007 by using his personal credit card. “He also used to fraudulently procure rejection slips of Indian parents with a motive to use them to send children for foreign adoptions,” CBI release stated.

The CBI’s case is the outcome of criminal writ petitions filed by NGO’s Advait foundation and Sakhee in 2006 and 2007.
Reacting to the CBI’s charge, the agency’s spokesperson said adoptive parents were given children only after obtaining orders from the family court or the district court.

''Each and every child was admitted to Preet Mandir through judicial process and every child was given in adoption after completing all legal formalities as per the government’s Cara (Central Adoption Resource Authority) guidelines, the Juvenile Justice Act, 2000, as well as Supreme Court directions,” he said. Preet Mandir has given more than 2,000 children in adoption in the past 33 years, he added.

With regards to the charge that the Kanhe Phata rehabilitation centre was opened for illegal activities, Preet Mandir said the centre was opened after obtaining the necessary licences from the state government and that it was closed after a damaging TV report in 2006.

Preet Mandir stressed that it was the CBI which twice in the past had given a clean chit to it in the same case.

http://www.dnaindia.com/india/report_maharashtra-officials-linked-to-adoption-scam-cbi_1384343

read also:Case against Pune-based NGO official for child trafficking


Kamis, 13 Mei 2010

Special Needs Adoptions seems attractive - shorter waiting lists ?

Een gehandicapt kindje adopteer je sneller

  • woensdag 12 mei 2010
  • Auteur: Eline Bergmans
Het aantal adoptiekinderen met een handicap neemt de jongste jaren toe. Een zogenaamd 'special needs'-kindje is vaak de enige manier voor ouders om niet ellenlang op een wachtlijst te belanden.

In Nederland heeft al meer dan de helft van de adoptiekinderen een medische aandoening. De vereniging Wereldkinderen verwacht dat over vijf à tien jaar alleen nog maar special needs-kinderen ter adoptie naar Nederland zullen komen. In België loopt het niet zo'n vaart, maar toch.

Wachttijd: vier jaar

Dat er meer kinderen met een aandoening geadopteerd worden heeft onrechtstreeks te maken met het Haags Adoptieverdrag dat in 1995 in werking trad. Dat verdrag zegt dat kinderen alleen door buitenlandse ouders mogen geadopteerd worden als ze niet bij hun biologische familie kunnen opgroeien en als er geen adoptie- of stabiel pleeggezin in eigen land gevonden kan worden. 'Gevolg is dat er sindsdien veel minder kinderen interlandelijk worden toegewezen,' zegt Inge Demol van de Vereniging voor Kind en Adoptiegezin, VAG. 'De wachttijd voor een buitenlandse adoptie bedraagt vandaag gemiddeld zo'n vier jaar.'

'Voor de jonge en gezonde kinderen wordt gemakkelijker een gezin in eigen land gevonden,' bevestigt Dorine Chamon, de Vlaamse adoptieambtenaar. 'Voor de oudere kinderen en ook de kinderen met speciale noden is het vaak noodzakelijk om internationale adoptiemogelijkheden te onderzoeken.' Sinds 2009 zijn er ook speciale lijsten met special needs-kinderen.

Adoptieorganisatie Ray of Hope werkt bijvoorbeeld met China, dat zo'n aparte lijst hanteert. 'Voor alle duidelijkheid: het herkomstland zelf bepaalt die werkwijze ,' zegt Fien De Coene, coördinator van Ray of Hope. 'Maar het klopt dat de wachttijd voor deze kinderen duidelijk korter is.'

Verwachtingen bijstellen

De kortere wachttijd kan nooit de enige motivatie van kandidaat-adoptiefouders zijn. Daar wordt grondig op gescreend. 'Toch kan ik me voorstellen dat kandidaat-ouders verleid kunnen worden door die kortere wachttijd,' zegt Inge Demol van VAG. 'Vaak is het zo dat mensen beginnen aan de procedure met bepaalde verwachtingen, maar dat die in de loop van de tijd bijgesteld worden. Misschien willen ze in eerste instantie een gezond kind, maar bedenken ze later dat die special needs-kinderen hun zorg misschien meer nodig hebben. Het is wel belangrijk dat ze goed geïnformeerd worden over de zorgen die de kindjes vragen. Want ik vrees dat sommige ouders dat op voorhand niet goed inschatten.'

Lees ook

Minggu, 09 Mei 2010

Girl from Cameroon illegally taken for adoption 11 years ago still waits for her status


Kameroens meisje wachtte elf jaar op haar adoptie


Mijn adoptie-ouders dienden een adoptie aanvraag in bij de notaris, maar kregen daar geen antwoord. Ze doen ook geen moeite meer om me te adopteren of om ervoor te zorgen dat ik papieren krijg.
04-04-2010 | StampMedia - Lisa A. May
Dagelijks komen mensen naar België om een betere toekomst te zoeken. Velen komen vrijwillig, anderen worden gedwongen en sommige worden voorgelogen. Dorothea verbleef 11 jaar van haar jeugd illegaal in ons land. Haar adoptieouders kenden de procedures niet.

Dagelijks komen mensen naar België om een betere toekomst te zoeken. Velen komen vrijwillig, anderen worden gedwongen en sommige worden voorgelogen. Dorothea verbleef 11 jaar van haar jeugd illegaal in ons land. Haar adoptieouders kenden de procedures niet.

Dorothea Onango (17)* kwam op haar zesde verjaardag naar België. Haar werd gezegd dat ze op vakantie kwam. Maar eens in België vernam ze dat ze niet meer terug naar Kameroen kon. De zakenpartners van haar vader zouden haar adopteren.

Het verhaal van Dorothea

Dorothea: “Ik zei daag tegen mijn ouders, stapte in het vliegtuig en kwam naar België met meneer Claessen, zakenpartner van mijn vader. Mijn moeder wilde niet dat ik wegging, maar ze had geen keuze want vrouwen hebben in Afrika niets te zeggen.”

“Ik was nooit een kind dat zijn gevoelens toonde,” vertelt Dorothea verder. “Als je in Kameroen weende, was je zwak. Ik heb niet gehuild toen ik vertrok. Maar ik was heel bang. Ik ben naar België gekomen met een vreemde die er wit uit zag. Ik wilde mijn familie niet achter laten, maar aan de andere kant was ik zeer benieuwd naar de wilde verhalen die ik over het westen had gehoord.”

Eenmaal in België kreeg Dorothea te horen dat ze niet meer terugging naar Kameroen. Ze kreeg te horen dat haar ouders het moeilijk hadden, financieel en met elkaar. Ze ging dus geadopteerd worden door meneer en mevrouw Claessen.

“Mijn moeder werkte niet en mijn vader had het financieel niet makkelijk wat onze leven in Kameroen extra moeilijk maakte. Maar er was een groter probleem: mijn vader was verliefd op een andere vrouw en ging dus weg bij mijn moeder. Daarom moest ik weg, het was om mij te beschermen.”

Afstandelijk

“Wat me echt verbaasde toen ik hier aankwam, waren de vele winkels hier in België”, zegt Dorothea. “Maar ik voelde me zo vreselijk alleen. Ik begreep maar niet waarom mensen hier zo afstandelijk waren, waarom iedereen het zo druk had en waarom mensen zich zo versnelden om ergens te geraken. Dagen werden weken, weken werden maanden. Het werd hier koud en ik miste mijn ouders en broer vreselijk.”

Op school hier in België werd Dorothea gepest en gediscrimineerd. “Mijn echte vader is zwart, mijn moeder mulat. Ik ben licht gekleurd, heb kroeshaar en groene ogen. Ik hoor nergens bij.” In Kameroen was ze een blanke maar in België is ze “maar een bruine”. Kinderen lachten haar uit, trokken aan haar haren en betastten haar huid.

Illegaal

“Mijn adoptie-ouders dienden een adoptie aanvraag in bij de notaris, maar kregen daar geen antwoord”, vertelt Dorothea. “Ze doen ook geen moeite meer om me te adopteren of om ervoor te zorgen dat ik papieren krijg.”

Volgens René Naegels, Dorothea’s voogd, is het de schuld van de notaris dat het zover is gekomen. “Meneer en mevrouw Claessens zijn onwetend. De notaris had ze moeten zeggen waar ze moesten zijn en wat ze moesten doen.”

Vijf jaar

Via de voogd heeft Dorothea nu een verblijfvergunning van 5 jaar. Ze blijft Kameroense maar mag voorlopig in België wonen. Ze moest wel voldoen aan bepaalde eisen zoals bewijzen dat ze geïntegreerd was en goede punten haalde op school. Ook moest ze aantonen dat ze over stabiele bestaansmiddelen beschikte.

“Niet moeilijk want ik ga al meer dan tien jaar naar school hier in België”, zegt Dorothea. Maar was die hele procedure wel nodig? Kon ze niet geregulariseerd worden op grond van humanitaire redenen aangezien ze zoveel heeft mee gemaakt? Naegels: “Dit is een vraag die je aan een minister moet stellen, ik maak de weten niet.”

De Vlaamse Centrale Autoriteit Adoptie laat op onze vraag weten dat een eventuele regularisatie van Dorothea ondertussen de verantwoordelijkheid is van de Dienst Vreemdelingenzaken.

* Op vraag van Dorothea werden haar naam en die van haar adoptieouders veranderd.

© 2010 – StampMedia – Lisa A. May

Senin, 03 Mei 2010

CHINESE ADOPTEE GATHERING

Chinese Adult Adoptee Worldwide Reunion

We are a group of adult Hong Kong and Chinese adoptees and orphans here to support and to enjoy getting to know each other from the same homeland, to build ties with those who stayed home, and to keep ties with one another as older mentors for younger Chinese adoptees worldwide (see Chinese Adoptee Links). In future years, we hope other adult Chinese adoptees and orphans will join us to celebrate their future journeys home or to learn more about their experiences in their countries in the Pacific Rim/Southeast Asia.

We are planning our first adoptee reunion in Hong Kong this year, with the sole goal of bringing our sisters and brothers together in the place of our birth so that we can, as a group, share stories, bond, support, experience our birth city and cultures. As a Hong Kong Planning Committee, we have been very successful in linking with the local Hong Kong communities, for better cultural understandings, insight into our pasts and just a wonderful way to make friends with others with similiar backgrounds.

Our reunion dates and venue is set (with extra rooms to enable those who want their own mini-reunion because you’re from the same orphanage/sisterhood or even a member of the same global adoptee group). While we are starting to surge forward with the planning, adoptees from around the globe are linking with each other, organising themselves in their local community/country to see what we can do in spreading the word in order to help create what we believe would be an amazing experience. If you can help us spread the word through distributing our poster, we welcome your support.

Please feel free to explore the site and see how the reunion is developing, especially in Reunion Info Page. Even if you don’t think you will be able to join this reunion this year, we would still love to hear from you. Consider being part of our virtual Planning Committee, and maybe you can host a future gathering in your home country in the future?

First Chinese Adult Adoptee Worldwide Reunion 2010, Hong Kong

Theme: Journey Through Adoption

Tuesday, September 28 to Saturday, October 2, 2010

TO REGISTER

1. R.S.V.P. to attend in Facebook.

2. Download a Registration Form from the bottom of Reunion Info page, fully complete it and submit it to MailGuard('info','caawr.com') info@caawr.com by May 31 2010.

3. Join our CAAWR Facebook page for updates and keep in touch with each other for the future.