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GUATEMALA PASSES ADOPTION LAW, POTENTIALLY ENDING NOTORIOUS INTERNATIONAL CHILD-TRAFFICKING RACKET.

GUATEMALA PASSES ADOPTION LAW, POTENTIALLY ENDING NOTORIOUS INTERNATIONAL CHILD-TRAFFICKING RACKET.

 

Publication: NotiCen: Central American & Caribbean Affairs

Publication Date: 13-DEC-07

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COPYRIGHT 2007 Latin American Data Base/Latin American Institute

Guatemala's legislature passed a law Dec. 11 that could and should put an end to the country's deserved reputation as a free market for trafficking in babies, the adoptions racket. Social groups within the country and the international community have been exerting great pressure for years to end the system by which pretty much anyone could buy a baby for about US$30,000 and be able to have it sooner than would be the case in any other country in the world (see NotiCen, 2007-05-24).

Eighty votes, or two-thirds of the total, were needed to get the law passed in the unicameral Congress, and it was uncertain as late as the day before whether the required number of deputies could be rounded up from their vacations to do the job.

Pressure on the deputies came from the very pinnacles of the international presence in Guatemala. The diplomatic corps dropped in en masse to observe the floor proceedings and party-delegation chiefs promised to muster their people on time. Party whips counted four legislators who had presented excuses not to show up and several more were said to be traveling. The legislature has been in recess since Nov. 28.

President-elect Alvaro Colom said he had appealed to his Unidad Nacional de la Esperanza (UNE) delegation, the legislature's largest. Ex-Gen. Otto Perez Molina, leader of the opposition Partido Patriota (PP), whom Colom beat for the presidency, also marshaled his forces in favor of the adoption law. Delegation chief Roxana Baldetti promised 11 of her 14 deputies would be there.

Part of what brings the opposing parties together on this legislation is the scandalous nature of a for-profit adoption system in which the state plays almost no role, regulatory or otherwise. The new law will create a national adoption council composed of a delegate from the Corte Suprema de Justicia (CSJ), a representative of the Foreign Ministry, and one from the Secretaria de Bienestar Social (social welfare secretariat).

Congress president Ruben Dario Morales said in anticipation of the vote, "Passage of the law is an obligation of the legislature and of its leadership. I'm confident that the will be there among the parties to show up and to pass it. If not, I will resign." That level of commitment gave observers some certainty on the theory that he had a pretty good idea of the count.

Even the often fractious Frente Republicano Guatemalteco (FRG), led by ex-de facto President Efrain Rios Montt (1982-1983), seemed to be aboard. "Our party is in favor of approving the law of adoptions," said delegation chief Aristides Crespo. "We are confident that there will be a quorum, but it is the responsibility of each legislator to attend the plenary sessions that are convened."

The next day the confidence of the leaders was justified. The law passed, but stopping the adoptions already in the pipeline was not in the cards. The law stipulates that the 3,700 children already tagged to specific adoptive parents will be delivered, without being subject to the new rules.

The law will take effect next year. "Starting Dec. 31, the business of adoptions is over," said Deputy Rolando Morales. No longer will the US$30,000 prospective parents fork over be used to encourage mothers to sell their babies, women to be used as breeding stock, people to steal children off the streets, notaries to become rich through the most corrupt of practices, and adoptive parents abroad to remain ignorant of where their babies came from.

By far, the largest proportion of Guatemalan adopted children goes to the US. The process was so quick under the unregulated free-market system that now one in every 100 Guatemalan children grows up as an adopted US citizen. Guatemala exported 4,728 children worldwide last fiscal year, up from 4,135 in fiscal 2006. The country was second only to the largest country in the world, China, in providing babies to US parents, according to the US State Department. China exported 5,453 children, down from 6,493 the year before.

After Guatemala:

Russia, at 2,310, down from 3,706 in 2006.

Ethiopia, 1,255, up from 732

South Korea, 939, down from 1,376

Vietnam, 626, up from 163

Ukraine, 606, up from 460

Kazakhstan, 540, down from 587

India; 416, up from 320

Liberia; 314, down from 353.

Stricter laws mean fewer US adoptions

Guatemala's tougher standards might contribute to a three-year trend toward lower numbers of foreign children adopted in the US. Tougher standards in China and Russia are thought to have brought on the declines seen in those countries. Over all, reported the State Department, adoptions from abroad have fallen to 19,411, a 15% decline in two years.

The decline in response to better safeguards might indicate that adoptive parents in the US do not care very much about the circumstances under which they get their children, but it is apparently a bad moment for the US adoption industry. "A drop in international adoptions is sad for children," said Thomas Atwood, president of the National Council for Adoption. "National boundaries and national pride shouldn't get in the way of children having families."

Other factors contributing to the decline, according to the State Department, are an increase in domestic adoptions in China as economic conditions improve there and the restrictions tighten giving priority to stable married couples between 30 and 50 and excluding single people, obese people, and people with financial or health problems.

Tighter scrutiny in China also means longer waiting periods. At 24 months or more, it takes more than twice as long to adopt a Chinese baby as it does one from Guatemala.

Russia, too, has seen sharp drops as its economy improves. Authorities there suspended all foreign adoption-agency operations and have been carefully, and slowly, reaccrediting them.

The upsurge in Guatemalan adoptions last year was seen as an offset as adoptions got more difficult elsewhere. With the new standards, Tom DeFilipo, president of the Joint Council on International Children's Services, said Guatemalan adoptions could decline too, now that the industry's swamp is to be drained of fraud, theft, and extortion (see NotiCen, 2006-05-25).

De Filipo's organization represents international adoption agencies, and he was generally optimistic about the trends because he anticipates plenty of supply from elsewhere to fill the gap. "What you're seeing is fewer countries sending very large numbers of children and a broader range of countries participating. Over the long term, I think this is a healthy trend." He saw Kenya, Peru, and Brazil as countries likely to produce more children for international adoption.

Harvard law professor Elizabeth Bartholet, however, saw the trends as "totally depressing." She placed her hopes in UNICEF and other international organizations to encourage countries to keep their kids at home, even when domestic programs are inadequate, as they clearly would be in Guatemala, where there has been no economic boom to support an upsurge in domestic adoption, and where endemic racism militates against it (see NotiCen, 2006-05-25).

Bartholet, an adoption expert, said that "UNICEF is a major force. They've played a major role in jumping on any country sending large numbers of kids abroad, identifying it as a problem rather than a good thing."

It is the agency's policy, said UNICEF child-protection spokesman Geoffrey Keele, that "the best interests of the child must be the guiding principle. We don't go around discouraging international adoption. We just want to be sure it's done properly." With its new law, Guatemala is set to become one more country where international adoption is done properly. (Sources: Reuters, 11/30/07; 12/01/07; The Washington Post, 12/02/07; Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, 12/04/07; El Periodico (Guatemala), 12/10/07; Prensa Libre (Guatemala), 12/11/07; Associated Press, 12/12/07 )

Statement of Elizabeth Bartholet

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U.S. HOUSE WAYS AND MEANS SUBCOMMITTEE
ON INCOME SECURITY AND FAMILY SUPPORT
Statement of  Elizabeth Bartholet
My name is Elizabeth Bartholet.  I am a Professor of Law at Harvard Law School, and Faculty Director here of the Child Advocacy Program.  I have taught and written about child welfare issues generally, and child maltreatment and foster care issues specifically, for more than two decades.  I am the author of two books and many articles addressing these issues, including Nobody’s Children: Abuse and Neglect, Foster Drift, and the Adoption Alternative (Beacon 1999).  I have focused significant attention during this time on issues of race in the child welfare system, and have authored many articles on such issues, including a leading article on race matching and transracial adoption entitled Where Do Black Children Belong: The Politics of Race Matching in Adoption, 139 U. Penn. L. Rev. 1163 (1991).  Selected publications are listed on my website at www.law.harvard.edu/faculty/bartholet. 
I am now at work on a major article addressing the issue of Racial Disproportionality in the child welfare system, the topic of your hearing.  I am troubled by the nature of the Advisory for this Hearing, as it appears to buy into ideas about the nature of Racial Disproportionality that I think are fundamentally flawed.  I hope that the Subcommittee will take into account a full range of views on the issues.
There is no question but that African American children enter and remain in the foster care system in disproportionate numbers as compared to their percentage of the general population and as compared to children of some other races and ethnic backgrounds.  I will refer to this as Racial Disproportionality.   I share the Subcommittee’s view that this represents some kind of problem.  But the question is, what kind of problem.
There is a large and powerful group of advocates promoting the idea that Racial Disproportionality results from racially discriminatory decision-making in the child welfare system, and that the solution is to stop removing as many black children from their parents, and to do more to reunify those removed with their parents.  I’ll refer to this as the Racial Disproportionality Movement.  This Movement bases its assumption about discrimination on the claim that black and white rates of child maltreatment are the same, and relies as the Subcommittee Advisory does on the National Incidence Studies for support of this claim.  The problem is that this aspect of the NIS studies has been persuasively debunked by respected scholars, and there are many reasons to conclude that blacks have higher child maltreatment rates because as a group they are disproportionately associated with characteristics that have been generally agreed to be valid predictors for child maltreatment, including poverty, single parent status, and serious substance abuse.
Assuming that black children are being removed to foster care because of actual serious maltreatment rather than discriminatory decision-making, it would be dangerous for black children to pursue the Movement’s goal of keeping more black children at home – it would put more children at risk of ongoing serious abuse and neglect.
This does not mean we should do nothing.  Racial Disproportionality is a problem even if it is better for black children at risk of maltreatment at home to be removed to foster care.  Black children should not be maltreated in the first place, and although foster care serves as a protective institution for those who are at risk at home, it is  still true that children maltreated and then removed to foster care, will as a group not do especially well in the future. 
But the solutions for this problem are very different than those proposed by the Racial Disproportionality Movement.  The appropriate solutions are to focus more efforts and resources on up-front child maltreatment prevention programs – programs such as Intensive Early Home Visitation which reach first-time pregnant women and give them the kind of supportive services that can prevent them from falling into the patterns that generate child maltreatment.
I hope that the Subcommittee will look into the Racial Disproportionality issue in depth, and not accept the simplistic analysis and related prescriptions for “reform” that will be pressed upon it at this Hearing, and that were uncritically adopted in the GAO July 2007 report addressing Racial Disproportionality.
I have attached hereto as requested  my testimony on a related matter, in which I responded to the Donaldson Institute Report calling for amending the Multiethnic Placement Act.  In this testimony I rebut the Donaldson Report’s various claims, and I urge Congress to reject the call to amend MEPA.

Response to
Donaldson Institute Call for Amendment of the Multiethnic Placement Act (MEPA)
to Reinstate use of Race as a Placement Factor
CCAI Briefing
6/10/2008
Dirksen Senate Office Building
by Elizabeth Bartholet
Professor of Law and Faculty Director, Child Advocacy Program, Harvard Law School 
I am here speaking on my own behalf, but I am also authorized to speak on behalf of the National Council on Adoption, the American Academy of Adoption Attorneys, the Center on Adoption Policy, and Harvard Law School’s Child Advocacy Program, for which I serve as Faculty Director.  We all join in urging you to resist any attempt to amend the Multiethnic Placement Act, an Act that took a hugely important step forward to protect black children from delay and denial of adoptive placement, an Act which the Department of Health and Human Services has only recently begun to vigorously enforce, an Act which has begun to make an important difference for children.
I have devoted a good deal of my professional life for more than two decades to studying issues of transracial adoption.  I wrote what is generally considered the leading law review article, in which I dealt extensively with the social science related to transracial adoption, and also with the evidence as to the impact on black children of pre-MEPA race-matching policies, policies which resulted in holding children in foster care for months, years, and often their entire childhood, rather than placing them in other-race homes.[1] I have written many articles and book chapters since, bringing that research up to date.[2] 
It is that research, and that evidence, which I have followed over the years to date, that led me to the position that we needed MEPA in exactly the form we have it today, in order to protect black children from the devastating damage that delay in adoptive placement causes.                 
As a result I worked closely with Senator Metzenbaum and those in Congress supporting him in the struggle to get MEPA passed in its current form.  I’m very familiar with the goals of the MEPA legislation, both the 1994 version, which is the legal regime that the Donaldson Institute wants us to return to, and the reasons that Sen Metzenbaum and others felt it essential in 1996 to amend MEPA to give us the law that we have today.
I have also testified at the Congressional hearing held to investigate problems with MEPA enforcement in the early years.  And this past fall I testified at the hearing held by the U.S. Civil Rights Commission on the very same topic raised by the Donaldson Inst. Report – whether there is any need to amend MEPA.  Notably the CRC has not called to date for any legislation amending MEPA, and I think, based on the tone of that hearing, it is exceedingly unlikely it will.  I urge you if interested in the CRC’s views to consult with the Chair at that hearing, Abigail Thernstrom.
The Donaldson Institute Report at issue in today’s briefing (5/27/08) calls for a change in MEPA so that it would again allow what MEPA was designed to prohibit the use of race to delay or deny adoptive placement.  Congress should ignore this Report, and I assume it will have the sense to do so.  The requested amendment to MEPA would return us to a regime in which social workers try to “match” foster children waiting for homes with same-race parents, delaying and denying adoptive placement as occurred pre-MEPA. 
By authorizing state officials to use race to decide important issues regarding family formation, this amendment would fly in the face of our nation’s body of civil rights law, and almost surely be found unconstitutional by the courts.  Federal and state civil rights laws uniformly forbid any use of race as a factor in official decision-making.  MEPA in its current form is consistent with that great body of law.  MEPA regulations make clear that race can only be used in truly exceptional cases and consistent with what is known in constitutional law as the “strict scrutiny” standard.  This is exactly what is called for to satisfy the U.S. Constitution, which forbids the use of race by official decision-makers except in an extraordinarily small category of cases.        
A great deal of work and thought went into the development of MEPA, and into the regulations and guidelines issued by the Department of Health and Human Services interpreting and applying MEPA.  Similar work and thought has gone into implementing MEPA throughout the land, with the first major enforcement decisions issued in 2003 and 2005.[3]  We now finally have civil rights law governing foster care and adoption that is consistent with the rest of the nation’s civil rights law and with the federal constitution.  The burden of proof is on anyone who at this stage, when we are finally beginning to reap the rewards of this process, wants to roll the law back.  The Donaldson Report has done nothing to meet that burden.
The Donaldson Report consists of little more than a series of false and misleading claims.  First is that the Report is a “research-based” publication, and that the Institute is “the pre-eminent research” organization in the field.  The Donaldson Institute is well-known in the adoption area as an advocacy organization committed to the idea that birth and racial heritage are of central importance, and this Report is an advocacy document, endorsed by organizations with well-known hostility to MEPA.  There is nothing wrong with advocacy.  But nobody should be deceived that this Report contains a fair-minded, unbiased assessment of the facts or the social science research.
A second Donaldson claim is that MEPA is not working to enable increased numbers of black children to find adoptive homes, as it was supposed to.  The fact is that transracial adoptions have increased post-MEPA, although not yet as much as we might hope.  But it takes time for laws to have an impact, and it is only recently that the federal government began serious implementation efforts, issuing its first enforcement decision in 2003, with that decision not upheld on administrative appeal until 2006.[4]  In any event, there is certainly no reason to think that recreating a barrier to transracial adoption as the Donaldson Report calls for will do anything other than make it harder to find homes for waiting children.  The fact is that more than half the kids in foster care are kids of color, and the overwhelming majority of the population of prospective parents is not color-matched for these kids.  Recreating race as a reason to disqualify prospective parents, and deter them from even applying, is not the way to find more homes for the waiting children.
A third claim is that MEPA harms black children by preventing social workers from adequately preparing transracial adoptive parents to raise black children.  However MEPA allows such preparation as any fair reading of the law and the HHS Guidelines makes clear.  Many many agencies throughout the land are currently engaged in educating and socializing prospective parents regarding racial issues pursuant to this law and these Guidelines.  Nothing in the current law requires that social workers operate on a race-blind or color-blind basis in helping prospective parents understand the challenges involved in transracial parenting, or in preparing prospective parents to meet those challenges, or in enabling prospective parents to decide if they are capable of appropriately parenting other-race children.  Nobody that I know in the large group of those who support the current MEPA regime do this because they believe in an entirely “race-blind” system or because they don’t think race matters.  Of course race matters, and of course social workers should be free to talk about racial issues as they educate and prepare prospective parents.
What MEPA forbids is segregating the transracial from other prospective adopters, and subjecting transracial prospective parents to a pass-fail racial attitude test, a test in which they can be disqualified if they don’t give the state-determined “right” answer to complex issues about how to address children’s racial heritage.  It also forbids otherwise using race as the basis for eliminating prospective parents.  History tells us what would happen if social workers were again empowered to use race in making adoptive decisions, even if they were to be authorized only to use race as “a factor,” as the Report argues. 
I’ll mention just two pieces of that history.  First, the fact is that from the 1970's until MEPA’s passage the federal Constitutional rule was that race could be “a factor” but not the determinative factor in adoptive decision-making, the same rule the Donaldson Report calls for, and in the name of that rule state agencies engaged in rigid race-matching, often locking black children into foster care for their entire childhood rather than placing them across racial lines.  The 1994 version of MEPA forbid the use race to delay or deny placement, but permitted the use of race as “a factor.”  Senator Metzenbaum came out of retirement to help pass the 1996 amendments to MEPA because he and others had concluded based on seeing how the 1994 MEPA was working, that it was not working, that allowing social workers to use race as “a factor” meant that they were continuing to use it systematically to delay and deny placement, and accordingly the 1996 amendment changed the law to forbid social workers from any use of race as a basis for decision-making. 
The second bit of history I’ll mention are the cases in Ohio and South Carolina that triggered the Dept. of HHS’s first two MEPA enforcement decisions.  I urge all who might even contemplate the idea of following the Donaldson recommendation to amend MEPA to read these decisions for themselves.  These decisions show in horrifying detail how social workers who thought they had the power to use race as “a factor” in screening prospective transracial parents used that power.  The decisions describe case after case in which black foster care children with serious disabilities were denied homes with eager transracial adoptive parents based on decisions that the parents had the wrong friends, or the wrong paintings on their walls, or went to the wrong church, or lived in the wrong neighborhood, with the children then relegated to waiting in foster care yet longer for that needed permanent home.
A fourth Donaldson claim is that there is new research demonstrating, in contrast to prior research, that transracial adoptees have “problems.”  The fact is that the entire body of good social science still provides no evidence that children suffer in any way by being placed in a transracial rather than a same-race home, and it provides lots of evidence that children suffer by being delayed in finding permanent homes, as they are when we reduce the number of eligible homes by using race as a placement factor.  The alleged “new and different” research relied on in the Report shows only that different parents may have different parenting styles, and that different parenting styles may have an impact on children’s attitudes including some of their ideas about racial matters.  This is hardly surprising or new, and it says nothing about whether children are better or worse off by virtue of transracial as compared to same-race parenting.  Indeed despite misleading claims in the Report’s Executive Summary, the relevant section in the body of the Report concedes that the research does “not provide sufficient basis for reaching conclusions about the level of problems experienced by Black children in foster care who are adopted transracially compared to those adopted by Black families.”  (P. 29)                 
The Donaldson Report also expresses concern that there has not been enough recruitment of prospective parents of color so that their numbers would match the kids of color in the foster care system.  The fact is that such recruitment has gone on for decades, with the result that black Americans adopt at the same or higher rates as whites, which is surprising given the socio-economics of race and the fact that it is usually the relatively more privileged who feel capable of stepping forward to do the volunteer parenting that adoption represents.  In any event, MEPA in its current form already provides for the kind of recruitment that the Report calls for, so there is no need to amend MEPA in order to enable such recruitment.
The reality is that most of the children needing permanent homes in this country and in the larger world are children of color, while most of the people in a position to step forward to adopt are white.  The additional reality revealed by the research on transracial adoptive families is that love works across color lines.  If we want children to have the permanent homes they desperately need, we must recognize these realities.  I urge the CCAI and Congress to reject these calls to move backward in time, and instead to embrace MEPA in its current form.

ELIZABETH BARTHOLET
Education:
J.D. magna cum laude, Harvard Law School,1965; Harvard Law Review, 1963-65
B.A. cum laude in English Literature, Radcliffe College,1962 
Employment:
Harvard Law School, Cambridge, MA, Professor of Law, 1983-present
Morris Wasserstein  Public Interest Professor of Law, 1996-present
Faculty Director, Child Advocacy Program, 2004-present
Assistant Professor of Law, 1977-83
Founding Director and President, Legal Action Center, New York, NY, 1973-77      
Counsel, Vera Institute of Justice, New York, NY, 1972-73
Staff Attorney, NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc., New York, NY, 1968-72
Staff Counsel, President's Comm’n on Law Enforcement & Admin. of Justice, Washington, DC, 1966-67                           
Selected Committee and Board Memberships:
Harvard Embryonic Stem Cell Research Oversight (ESCRO) Committee, 2007-present
Legal Action Center: Board of Directors, 1977-present; Vice-Chair of the Board, 1998-present          
American Academy of Adoption Attorneys, Honorary Membership, 1992-present
Boston Fertility & Gynecology Association, IVF Ethics Committee, 1991-present
U.S. State Department Advisory Committee on Intercountry Adoption, 1990-2000                           
Brigham and Women's Hospital, Assisted Reproductive Technology Ethics Committee, 1990-present          
NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc., New England Committee, 1994-98
Selection Committee for Harvard University Nieman Fellowship Program, 1996-97               
American Association of University Professors, Committee A on Academic Freedom and Tenure, 1990-93   
Society of American Law Teachers, Board of Directors, 1977-89                           
Civil Rights Reviewing Authority of the United States Department of Education, 1979-81                  
Board of Overseers of Harvard College, 1973-77                                                   
Executive Committee of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York, 1973-77                       
Overseers' Committee to Visit Harvard Law School, 1971-77                     
Bar Memberships:
Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 1978-present
United States Supreme Court, 1969-present
District of Columbia, 1967-99
State of New York, 1965-98
Arbitration and Mediation Associations and Panels:
American Arbitration Association (AAA)
Labor Panel, 1980-present                                                                     
            Commercial Panel, 1995-present
            Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination, Roster of Mediators, 1998-2002
American Postal Workers Union and U.S. Postal Service, Regular Arbitration Panels, 1988-1999
Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, Roster of Arbitrators, 1991-present                              
Mediation Research & Education Project, Inc., Mediation Panel, 1995-present                               
JAMS, Alternative Dispute Resolution Panel, 1997-2004
Selected Publications:
“International Adoption: The Human Rights Issues,” forthcoming chapter in Michelle Goodwin, ed., BABY MARKETS, (Cambridge Univ. Press 2008)
“International Adoption: The Child’s Story,” 24 Ga. St. U. L. Rev. 333 (2008) 
"International Adoption: Thoughts on the Human Rights Issues," 13 Buff. Hum. Rts. L. Rev. 151 (2007)
"Commentary: Cultural Stereotypes Can and Do Die: It's Time to Move on With Transracial Adoption,"  34 J. Am. Acad. Psychiatry Law 315 (2006)
"International Adoption,” chapter in CHILDREN AND YOUTH IN ADOPTION, ORPHANAGES, AND FOSTER CARE, ed., Lori Askeland, (Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc. 2005)
"Guiding Principles for Picking Parents," 27 Harv. Women’s L. J. 323 (2004); also published in a slightly revised form as chapter in GENETIC TIES AND THE FAMILY, Rothstein et al, ed. (Johns Hopkins Unviersity Press 2005).
"The Challenge of Children’s Rights Advocacy: Problems and Progress in the Area of Child Abuse and Neglect," 3 Whittier J. Child & Fam. Advoc. 3 (2004)
Book Review of Rachel F. Moran’s  “Interracial Intimacy: The Regulation of Race and Romance,” 33 Journal of Interdisciplinary History 320 (2002)
Reply, "Whose Children? A Response to Professor Guggenheim," 113 Harv. L. Rev.1999  (2000)
"Taking Adoption Seriously: Radical Revolution or Modest Revisionism?," 28 Cap. U.L. Rev. 77 (1999)
NOBODY’S CHILDREN: ABUSE AND NEGLECT, FOSTER DRIFT, AND THE ADOPTION ALTERNATIVE (Beacon Press,1999)
FAMILY BONDS: ADOPTION, INFERTILITY, AND THE NEW WORLD OF CHILD PRODUCTION  (Beacon Press, 1999), originally published as FAMILY BONDS: ADOPTION & THE  POLITICS OF PARENTING (Houghton Mifflin 1993)
"Reporting on Child Welfare and Adoption Policies," 53 Nieman Reports 74 (1999)
“Private Race Preferences in Family Formation,” 107 Yale L.J. 2351 (1998)
“International Adoption: Propriety, Prospects and Pragmatics,” 13 J. Am. Acad. Matrim. Law
181 (1996)
“What’s Wrong with Adoption Law?,” 4 The International Journal of Children’s Rights 263 (1996)
“Debate: Best Interests of the Child?,” with Nerys Patterson, Prospect, no. 11, 18-20 (Aug./Sept. 1996)
"Beyond Biology:  The Politics of Adoption & Reproduction," 2 Duke J. Gender L. & Pol'y 5 (1995)
"Race Separatism in the Family:  More on the Transracial Adoption Debate,” 2 Duke J. Gender L. & Pol'y 99 (1995), reprinted as “Debate 15: Should Transracial Adoptions Be Allowed?,” Controversial Issues in Social Policy, Howard J. Karger et al, 2nd Ed., 220-27 (Pearson Education, 2003)
"Adoption Rights and Reproductive Wrongs," in POWER & DECISION: THE SOCIAL CONTROL OF REPRODUCTION 177-203 (Harvard Press, 1994)
Articles based in part on FAMILY BONDS: "Blood Knots," American Prospect 48-57 (Fall 1993);
"Family Matters," Vogue 102-06 (Nov. 1993); "What's Wrong with Adoption Law," Trial 18-23 (Winter 1994)
"In Vitro Fertilization:  The Construction of Infertility and of Parenting," in ISSUES IN REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGY I, 253-60, Holmes, ed. (Garland Press, 1992, paperback ed. New York Univ. Press, 1994). 
"International Adoption: Current Status and Future Prospects," in 3 The Future of Children No.1,89-103  (Center for the Future of Children, Spring 1993
"Parenting Options For The Infertile," in Frug, WOMEN AND THE LAW 523-30 (Foundation Press, 1992)
Book Review of Cheri Register's ARE THOSE KIDS YOURS?, 33 Harv. Int'l. L. J. 649-53 (Spring 1992)
"Where Do Black Children Belong?  The Politics of Race Matching in Adoption," 139 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1163 (1991)
International Adoption:  Overview," chapter 10 in ADOPTION LAW AND PRACTICE (Matthew Bender 1988, Supp. 1997)
"Proof of Discriminatory Intent Under Title VII," 70 Cal. L.Rev. 5 (1982)
"Application of Title VII to Jobs in High Places," 95 Harv. L. Rev. 945 (1982)
Consulting and Advisory Arrangements:
Project Consultant to The Hastings Center, Reprogenetics Project, resulting in related report entitled “Reprogenetics and Public Policy: Reflections and Recommendations,” by Parens and Knowles,  Hastings Center Report Special Supplement (July - August, 2003). 
Selected Honors and Awards:
 Henry J. Miller Distinguished Lecture Series at Georgia State University, 2007
Sullivan Lecture at Capital University Law School, 1999
Massachusetts Appleseed Center, Award for Advocacy on Behalf of Foster Children, 1998
Radcliffe College Alumnae Recognition Award, 1997
Morris Wasserstein Public Interest Chair at Harvard Law School, 1996
Open Door Society, Friends of Adoption Award, 1994
Catholic Adoptive Parents Association, Media Achievement Award, 1994
Adoptive Parents Committee, Friends of Adoption Award for Adoption Literature, 1993
[1] “Where do Black Children Belong? The Politics of Race Matching in Adoption,” 139 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1163 (1991).
[2] “Commentary: Cultural Stereotypes Can and Do Die: It’s Time to Move on With Transracial Adoption,” 34 J. Am. Acad. Psychiatry Law 315(2006); “The Challenge of Children’s Rights Advocacy: Problems and Progress in the Area of Child Abuse and Neglect,” 3 Whittier J. Child & Fam. Advoc. 3 (2004); NOBODY’S CHILDREN: ABUSE AND NEGLECT, FOSTER DRIFT, AND THE ADOPTION ALTERNATIVE (Beacon Press, 1999); “Private Race Preferences in Family Formation,” 107 Yale L.J. 2351 (1998); FAMILY BONDS: ADOPTION, INFERTILITY, AND THE NEW WORLD OF CHILD PRODUCTION (Beacon Press, 1999), originally published as FAMILY BONDS: ADOPTION & THE POLITICS OF PARENTING (Houghton Mifflin 1993).
[3] These decisions appear on my website at http://www.law.harvard.edu/faculty/bartholet/ under Adoption Resources, MEPA Decisions.
[4]      Id.

Indonesia Earthquake Orphans - residency requirement

Indonesia Earthquake Orphans

Information on Indonesia Adoption

 

EMBASSY OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
JAKARTA, INDONESIA
Consular Section
Jl. Merdeka Selatan No. 5, Jakarta Pusat
Tel. (62-21) 3435-9000, Fax. (62-021) 3435-9922
Consul General: Mary E. Grandfield

ADOPTING CHILDREN IN INDONESIA

The Baby Merchants – Part 1

Article Index Sections Human Trafficking
The Baby Merchants – Part 1 Print E-mail
Written by Raissa Robles   
Monday, 01 June 2009
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What looked like a nursery filled with babies was a storage, processing and shipping center for Filipino babies.

When policemen entered a house in Jala Jala, Rizal just southeast of Manila on the night of December 15, 2008, they had a warrant to arrest a suspect accused of writing bouncing checks.

The last thing they expected to find was a room full of crying, cooing newborn babies.

“We were amazed to see so many babies,” Jala Jala town police chief Larry Malaybalay told Newsbreak.

There were nine diapered infants; each snuggled in a crib with stuffed toys for company. Each crib had a name on it. The room had the look of a bright and cheery nursery.

There was only one problem: there were no parents. Instead, the house had 11 adults including seven nannies and one Singaporean woman who repeatedly told the town police chief, “I love babies.”

“We asked for papers” to explain the babies' presence. “They couldn't show any,” he said.

“We arrested them all.”

Chief Inspector Malaybalay said “I felt something was wrong. Why were there so many babies (when) that was not an orphanage? Of course we became very suspicious.”

It turned out he had grounds for suspicion. Digging into the babies' backgrounds, the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) realized that the police may have stumbled on an international baby trafficking ring operating under its very nose since 2006.

DSWD Secretary Esperanza Cabral described the case as “very important” to her agency. She gave Newsbreak access to other agency officials.

The DSWD now suspects that what looked like a nursery filled with babies was actually something more chilling: a storage, processing and shipping center for Filipino babies.

Possibly involving more than 30 babies, it may well turn out to be the biggest and only case of highly organized and systematic baby trafficking in years. It shows how easy it is to smuggle babies out of the country, authorities said.

The operators preyed on the anguish of women, buying their unwanted babies from P2,000 to P7,000 each, some while still in their mothers' wombs. The babies were stored initially in a place in Pililla town and later in neighboring Jala Jala.

The Pililla town operation was ostensibly an orphanage called Hope for the Homeless Angels. It was registered with the Pililla government but never registered with the DSWD nor the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), as required by law.

Authorities believe that while the babies were in Pililla then later transferred to Jala Jala, they were fattened up, vaccinated, provided genuine or fake birth certificates, then flown to a commercial adoption agency in Singapore owned by Irene Low Ai Lian, who was caught red-handed with the babies in that December raid in Jala Jala.

The babies lived a regimented life, their bodily functions and milk intake closely monitored. For instance, according to a schedule provided to their nannies, they all had to be exposed to sunlight by early dawn.

If the police had not found the nine babies when they did, two would have simply disappeared, flown out of Manila as hand-carried baggage by December 22, 2009, according to a handwritten schedule taped to the babies' bedroom wall. Two other babies had been flown out earlier on December 6, the same schedule showed.

Authorities are now trying to trace up to 30 babies who were processed and shipped in this manner starting 2006, Supt. Malaybalay said.

A number of babies allegedly never made it to the airport, though. “I was told babies died on them in their previous location in Pililla which they called Hope for the Homeless Angels,” claimed Voltaire Gellido, one of Low's co-accused. Gellido was included in the charge sheet since he owns the house in Jala Jala where the babies were found and he was the original object of the police manhunt.

Gellido, a former mayor of Jala Jala, claimed in an exclusive interview that Low had decided to lease his Jala Jala residence in order to move out all the babies from Pililla because three of them nearly died there of pneumonia. She referred to the former site, located in a squatter area as “that dinky place,” he said.

The babies who did reach Singapore allegedly ended up with Low's Singapore-based agency, where they were turned over to foreigners who had each paid a “processing fee” of at least P600,000 (US$12,500) per baby. Upon request, though, this fee could be discounted or paid on installment, interest free.

In comparison, legal adoptions which all have to be coursed through the Philippine government, cost at least US$3,200 in processing and other fees, according to the Inter-Country Adoption Board (ICAB), the lone state agency to authorize all foreign adoptions and accredit all foreign adoption agencies.

Low's adoption agency in Singapore, the Fox Family Services Pte. Ltd., is not in the ICAB registry and therefore not authorized to facilitate foreign adoptions of Filipino babies, said Sally Escutin, chief of the DSWD legal service.

“Singapore is a transit point,” she said. Many babies eventually ended up elsewhere like Australia or Germany, she said.

Because of this, sources told Newsbreak that the Australian Embassy had contacted Philippine authorities to learn more about the case.

A passion for babies

It was the presence of a middle-aged Singaporean matron in an obscure lake shore town, two and a half hours drive from Manila, that set off alarm bells for the police.

Slim of build with her hair in a bun, the conservatively dressed Low, 51, was the picture of bewildered sincerity. “Her allegation was that she was shouldering the costs of the orphanage in good faith,” Supt. Malaybalay recalled her telling him.

“She said to me, 'I love babies'.”

She refused to give any statement, written or verbal at the police station.

But she gave interviews, especially to Singapore media, disowning any crime. She said she was merely a visitor and a donor to the orphanage housed in Jala Jala, now renamed The Jala Jala Home for the Needy Angels, Inc. She said she was an innocent, gullible and misguided do-gooder who was conned into donating large sums to what she belatedly realized was an illegal scheme.

According to Singapore's leading daily, The Straits Times: “She said she was staying in the house to oversee its refurbishment and to distribute food and clothes to the infants while the home awaited license by the authorities.'I am not here to match babies (with couples), but as a donor to support the home,'” she said. (read The Straits Times' story Facing prosecution)

“I am not a baby-trafficker,” she also told The New Paper, Singapore's second largest, days after her arrest. “I was at the wrong place at the wrong time.” (read The New Paper's story S'porean adoption agency owner accused of baby-trafficking )

Since her arrest last December, DSWD officials have been trying to find a link between her Fox Family commercial adoption agency in Singapore and the babies recovered outside Manila.

Atty. Escutin told Newsbreak she had stumbled on a definite link while surfing in Fox Family's official website. But the website disappeared and was replaced by an “under renovation” sign. She could no longer access it, she said. She called her discovery very revealing.

Newsbreak also encountered the same “under renovation” sign and therefore phoned Low's lawyer, Reynaldo Directo, to get her side of the story. Repeated requests for a return call were ignored.

Newsbreak therefore searched the web again and managed to retrieve portions of the Fox Family website and phone numbers.

Newsbreak was just as surprised as Irene Low was when she personally answered one of the numbers posted on the internet. “I'm somewhere around (the Philippines) but how did you get my number?” she asked.

When told it was from her website, she said, “but my website is no longer up.” Later, she said, “I have pulled out my website as you know until my resolution is clear.”

Out on bail but barred from leaving the country, she said, “I'm still waiting for a resolution. It's not over yet. I'm just waiting. Don't know why it's taking so long. I don't know if it's good or bad.”

“I did it out of my heart....That's what my passion is. I want to help people. I help kids and I help families....I just wanted to (help), because I've adopted two kids and they were wonderful.”

She sounded fragile and hurt - “It (the case) just affects me emotionally. I just can't get back on again until everything is clear.”

She was also very wary. She refused to discuss the case and told Newsbreak to talk to her lawyer because “he's got all the right words.” 

Newsbreak asked her whether she was getting her babies from Pililla and Jala Jala. She flatly denied this. “I'm not getting babies from there. I don't like these questions because it may implicate me from what I'm saying. Not that I'm guilty, I'm not.”

Her denial ran contrary to the introductory statement posted on her company website which said: “Fox Family Services Adoption Centre was established primarily to find good families for unwanted and abandoned infants and toddlers in the Philippines and elsewhere and to assist you in finding a child.”

When Newsbreak pointed that out, she said, “Well, it is not only in Philippines. In Philippines basically, in fact, I'm working with the DSWD.”

When asked whether she was referring to Maria Lourdes Martinez, the social welfare officer of the town of Pililla who is her co-accused in the case, she said, “Sorry, you've got to speak with the lawyer about this.”

Pressed further which DSWD official she had been working with, she said, “I really do not know if I should tell you at this point in time.”

Low also made the assertion that her adoption agency in Singapore could operate freely in the Philippines without need of accreditation from the Philippine government.

“It's not necessary for any adoption agency to be accredited...by any government,” she said.

She gave Newsbreak this parting advice: “Before you write a story get your facts right, get a lawyer. You don't just get half a story from me.”

This article was made possible with the generous support of the American people through the United States Department of State Office to Monitor and Combat trafficking in Persons and The Asia Foundation. The contents are the  responsibility of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Department of State of the United States or The Asia Foundation.

Book Reviews: Butter and Guns: Americaªs Cold War Economic Diplomacy

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Butter and Guns: Americaªs Cold War Economic Diplomacy

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  10 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
 Good on diplomatic history, bad on economics, March 30, 2000
By Excerpt from "The Independent Review" (Oakland, CA) - See all my reviews

This review is from: BUTTER AND GUNS: America's Cold War Economic Diplomacy (Hardcover)
To what did Americans owe their postwar prosperity? In "Butter and Guns: America's Cold War Economic Diplomacy," Yale University professor of history Diane B. Kunz argues: the defense spending policies of the national security state....
If military spending indeed "continually primed the pump of the American economy" (p. 63), as Kunz asserts, she might have wondered where the pump-priming dollars came from. What is missing from her analysis is a sensitivity to the notion of opportunity cost. As historians Thomas G. Paterson ("On Every Front: The Making and Unmaking of the Cold War") and Paul Kennedy ("The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers") have noted, the Cold War saddled America with enormous material costs in terms of forgone socioeconomic well-being, in terms of lost consumer-oriented production, and in terms of overburdened government finances. Moreover, even in the areas of education and infrastructure spending (GI Bills and the interstate highway act), where contemporary liberal economists claim that government spending contributed positively to economic growth, it hardly stands to reason that the Cold War was a prerequisite to such spending. The Cold War did allow America to play a preponderant role in the postwar world, particularly while the economies of Europe and Japan still lay in ruins. Yet the enormous demands that the Cold War placed on the American economy saddled it with costs that became quite apparent by the 1970s. Even NSC-68, the postwar "blueprint" of the national security state, recognized the enormousness of those costs. Kunz does not.
Because Kunz misinterprets the mainsprings of economic growth in the postwar period, she can only lament the passing of the Cold War. Having demonstrated little faith in the workings of free markets, she can only look to the future with a sense of foreboding, as her chapter entitled "Free Trade Forever?" suggests. She concludes, absurdly (but consistently), that "Josef Stalin rescued American fifty years ago" (p. 334) and wonders who is to rescue America now, because "the free market cannot solve every ill" (p. 335).
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From fast track to mommy track to adoption activist


Published: May 31, 2009 02:00 AM
Modified: May 30, 2009 09:25 PM

Diane Kunz of Durham with Elizabeth, 4, the youngest of her eight children. Four sons are biological, and four daughters are adopted.
Harry Lynch, Staff photo by Harry Lynch
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From fast track to mommy track to adoption activist
BY KRISTIN COLLINS, Staff Writer
Diane Kunz started with the desire to change one child's life.
But 13 years after adopting her first daughter from China, she now has hopes of helping every child, at home or abroad, who is growing up without a family.
Kunz, of Durham, is the mother of eight children, four adopted and four biological. She is also one of the nation's leading advocates for adoption, quietly changing national policy and helping thousands of families bring home children.
She and another adoptive mother are the founders of a think tank, the Center for Adoption Policy, based in New York, which aims to remove barriers to adoption. The group's work has won national awards and made Kunz a player on an international stage. Along the way, Kunz has also become a sort of guru for people going through the complex process of adoption.
She does most of her work from her home in Durham, baking chocolate chip muffins one minute and sitting in on a conference call with the State Department the next.
She has been a corporate lawyer in New York and a professor at Yale, but she says this job -- for which she receives no pay -- is the true work of her life.
"Every child has the right to a permanent, loving family," Kunz says.
A life of surprises
Kunz, 56, seems as surprised as anyone at the turn her life has taken since she helped found the center eight years ago. As a young woman, she never imagined herself as an impassioned social activist or a Brady Bunch-style mom.
The only child of Jewish immigrants, Holocaust survivors who settled in New York City, she spent much of her early life earning a law degree at Cornell University and working long hours at a corporate law firm in her native city. She and her husband, Tom, whom she met in law school, didn't have their first child until 1986, 12 years after they married.
She eventually had four sons and went on to become a history professor at Yale. She never even thought of adopting until the mid-1990s, when Chinese children became available for international adoption and she and Tom read a story about the phenomenon in The New York Times Magazine.
Once they learned more about it, they felt compelled to use their wealth, earned in successful law and academic careers, to help an orphaned child. Adoptions often cost tens of thousands of dollars, but that was no obstacle for them.
"We just had a feeling that we could do this," Kunz says. "We've been very lucky, and we felt this was the right thing to do."
They brought Eleanor home in 1996 and watched the child, who might have been doomed to life in a Spartan orphanage, blossom under their care. Soon, one child led to the next.
Their spacious home and the help of a nanny has made a large family easier for the Kunzes than for most. The younger children attend private school, and the Kunzes still get to go out alone once a week for dinner. Because of their advantages, they came to see helping unparented children as a moral obligation.
"Once you save one person's life," Tom Kunz says, "it's kind of hard to sit back and say, 'That's enough.' "
Hurdling barriers
Over the years, Kunz, like many adoptive parents, became something of an expert in the tricky process of adoption. She met another adoptive mother in New York, Ann Reese, who has two children from Romania, and they began to talk about all the many difficulties of bringing parentless children into their homes.
Some of the barriers were ideological, such as a bias against placing black children with white parents, but others were simply bureaucratic snags, problems such as transferring health insurance between states.
"We just started conversations about, gee, this is wrong, and why aren't there people working on this?" Reese says.
Eventually, they decided to combine their expertise to help children stuck in foster homes or orphanages.
Four years ago, Kunz and her husband moved to Durham, and she continues her work from her home beside a golf course.
Now, Kunz and Reese are a sort of SWAT team for adoptive parents in desperate situations.
When thousands of Chinese adoptions were nearly stalled last year because of the technicalities of an international treaty, they negotiated with the State Department to allow those families already in process to bring their children home.
Also last year, when the U.S. government refused to issue visas to several hundred children given up for adoption in Vietnam, Kunz became both a sort of social worker and lobbyist on their behalf. U.S. immigration officials said there were problems verifying that the children had been abandoned by their parents.
Barry and Donna DeLong of Durham were among those denied visas for the boy they wanted to adopt from Vietnam. Barry DeLong said there was no evidence of wrongdoing in their case, and the Vietnamese government was willing to allow the adoption. So they joined several Americans who went to Vietnam and adopted their children, even though they were not allowed to bring them back to the United States.
They, like many, were prepared to stay in Vietnam permanently if the U.S. government refused to issue their children visas. They had been living in Vietnam in a state of near-panic for weeks when Kunz began offering legal advice to them and several other families via e-mail and conference calls.
Barry DeLong said she was a calm yet forceful voice in a time of chaos. And he thinks it was partly her influence that, after several months, persuaded U.S. officials to relent and grant the children visas.
"I got a sense from her that this was where she was going to stay," DeLong said. "And if this person [in the U.S. government] wanted to continue in a happy career, they couldn't just blow her off."
Looking at each child
In addition to helping would-be parents, Kunz is also working to mute growing opposition to international adoption. Groups such as UNICEF say that allowing wealthy Westerners to adopt children from poor nations is a Band-Aid solution that fails to address the fundamental issues that cause child abandonment.
Kunz says she looks at the issue from the perspective of each child. "I would be happy to have a world where there is no prejudice and no poverty and no war," she says. "But right now, there are unparented children."
She says the best solution to problems that have stymied international adoption in recent years is to ensure an ethical process. The center is helping the State Department create more stringent guidelines for adoption agencies and pushing for harsher penalties for those who perpetrate fraudulent adoptions.
Kunz can talk about her work for hours. But on this day, she is interrupted by the patter of feet. Her three youngest girls bound into the room, giggling and shouting, followed by their nanny. Soon they are jumping into Kunz's lap, crawling around her feet, demanding hugs.
The center's work has become her vocation, but she says her own family -- built in part by adoption -- is her greatest reward.
"It's a cliché," she says, "but it's true."
kristin.collins@newsobserver.com or 919-829-4881
Read The News & Observer print edition on your computer with the new e-edition!
Diane Bernstein Kunz
Born: Nov. 9, 1952 in Queens, N.Y.
Family: husband, Tom Kunz; sons, Charles, 23, James, 22, William, 17, and Edward, 15; daughters, Eleanor, 13, Sarah, 8, Catherine, 5, and Elizabeth, 4.
Education: bachelor's degree from Barnard University; Law degree from Cornell University; master's degree from Oxford University; doctorate in history from Yale University
Career: corporate lawyer, 1976-1983; history professor at Yale, 1988-1998; history professor at Columbia University, 1998-2001; founder and member of board of directors, Center for Adoption Policy, 2001-present.
Honors: authored several award-winning books on diplomatic history. In 2008, won the Angels In Adoption award from the Congressional Coalition on Adoption Institute.
Hobbies: running, travel, reading.
© Copyright 2009, The News & Observer Publishing Company
A subsidiary of The McClatchy Company

 

Traffickers orphans in Romania ii tepuiesc on foreign pictures and presentations type Teleshopping

After blocking international adoptions

Traffickers orphans in Romania ii tepuiesc on foreign pictures and presentations type Teleshopping
by Razvan Popa | 22 MARCH 2006

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After you have been a mere merchandise export traffickers, some children in Romanian orphanages are now used as a bait to give the foreign tepe. Infants have become targets for traffickers in flesh, and those of several years are presented in photos as a product of taraba. Pictures are used to cheat on occidentalii desperate to adopt a child. Usually, the amounts removed by a presentation of the market "are the order of several thousand dollars.

After 2005 - when the Romanian authorities have imposed a total blockade in the adoptions - traffickers have allegedly found that "port" through which to continue to "export" the Romanian children. M. and D. Bosshart are Swiss citizens. The two lived, recently, a Romanian nightmare. Swiss story begins in 2002.

Then, in Romania, at Giurgiu is born Baby Alexandra. Birth certificate bears the date 6 March 2002.

In that period in Romania was in force moratorium that international adoptions were blocked. After two months of the birth of little, the National Authority for Child Protection and Adoption of a file was submitted by a certain Dan Vasile Aurel. The person listed as president of the Romanian Association of New Family - organization "apartment" located in Pantelimon, but appears in a decision by the government as accredited on adoptions. Dan Vasile then wanted to adopt a child without a name or specify the place where it is located. In August 2002 - three months after submission of the dossier - Dan Vasile fixed "target" and mentions in the file name Alexandra. During this period - the law - a family from Switzerland arrive in Romania and has little contact with the school institution in the state! A visit to the home of Giurgiu, although Alexandra figure already in the care of foster care. Moreover, although there was consent of the mother, although the child was considered neadoptabil and in Romania was the "embargo" in terms of international adoptions, the "Romanian New Family" was not any classified or rejected! So it came as elvetienii believe that will become the adoptive parents of the daughter. The two were in love at first sight for little at the center of investment in Giurgiu. Received from insurance "Romanian New Family" that the problem will be solved. I even received some pictures. In the three images is presented as a little girl at the market - a person dressed in a robe (probably a nurse) looks like a child trophy. Il away from you like a product, such teleshopping. Assistance smiling, little girl is scared and looks dizzy. The images are professionally done, in the sense that the background there is any object that demaste location. These images have come to the family from Switzerland who started upgraded "room daughter. They arranged a vain, because no girl has arrived in Switzerland. A court upheld the request of Romanian families who wanted to Alexandra.

Elvetienii saying little for the adoption of Giurgiu paid 9,000 euros! "This child lives in our hearts and has left her room ready in all these four years," said elvetienii. Bosshart husbands complain: "I understand the situation, as long as we registered our request to Government in 2002 and have already paid 9000 USD to take on Alexandra. After several days elvetienii have never met the situation. That, especially for the "intermediary" in Romania had, again, about them and they proposed a new deal. This time, in a letter sent recently, Dan Aurelian Vasile them another child. He advised her Swiss family establish a domicile in Romania, to establish a company here, to "go 2-3 times in Romania" and "we will have custody of the child as soon as we get a permanent residence permit. Finally, elvetienii were warned that this "adoption" costs amounted to approximately 9.000-12.000 dollars. Elvetienii say they are not alone in this stage - several families in our country have started such efforts to adoption of a child from Romania. And all received pictures of "goods".

Aurel Dan Vasile, who represents the adoption of "Romanian New Family", is known in industry as a lawyer. Man, however, was not found in records Bucharest Bar. The company is "apartment" in Pantelimon neighborhood. And the association does not answer the phone no.

About the new attacks of traffickers of children Romanians, Romanian Adoptions Office (ORA) said that "they no longer have any chance, especially as legislation has changed recently, and supervises the situation closely." Secretary of State Teodora Bertzi, chief of TIME says more, that has sent the Prosecutor and the Ministry of Administration and Interior several cases in which there is suspicion of trafficking in children. "We work with the Prosecutor on the case, and if Alexandra seems a typical case of what happened in the past in Romania," stated Secretary of State - "Then there were situations in which foreign families were induced in error that would be able to adopt children from Romania in any conditions. That's because intermediaries have speculated carente certain period of moratorium. Confrom Teodora Bertzi, at this moment to insist that families adopt a child from Romania are informed on ORA current legal situation regarding the adoption institution. "I advise on foreign interest to the Romanian Office for Adoptions about the laws, than to go the hands of intermediaries," he said Teodora Bertzi.
razvan.popa @ gandul.info
 
http://www.gandul.info/actual/traficantii-orfani-romania-ii-tepuiesc-straini-poze-prezentari-t.html?3927; 257668

==============================================================================================================

Dupa blocarea adoptiilor internationale

 

Traficantii de orfani din Romania ii tepuiesc pe straini cu poze si prezentari tip teleshopping

de Razvan POPA | 22 MARTIE 2006

 

 

Dupa ce au fost o simpla marfa de export pentru traficanti, unii copii din orfelinatele romanesti sunt folositi acum pe post de momeala pentru dat tepe la straini. Nou-nascutii au devenit tinte pentru traficantii de carne vie, iar cei de cativa ani sunt prezentati, in fotografii, ca un produs de taraba. Pozele sunt folosite pentru a-i pacali pe occidentalii disperati sa adopte un copil. De regula, sumele scoase dupa o "prezentare de piata" sunt de ordinul a cateva mii de dolari.

Dupa 2005 - cand autoritatile romane au impus o blocada totala in sistemul adoptiilor - traficantii au pretins ca au gasit "portite" prin care sa continue "exportul" copiilor romani. M. si D. Bosshart sunt cetateni elvetieni. Cei doi au trait, de curand, un cosmar romanesc. Povestea elvetienilor incepe prin 2002.

Atunci, in Romania, la Giurgiu, se nastea micuta Alexandra. Certificatul de nastere poarta data de 6 martie 2002.

In acea perioada in Romania era in vigoare moratoriul prin care adoptiile internationale erau blocate. Dupa doua luni de la nasterea micutei,la Autoritatea Nationala pentru Protectia Copilului si Adoptie a fost depus un dosar de catre un anumit Dan Aurel Vasile. Persoana figureaza ca presedinte al Asociatiei Romanian New Family - organizatie "de apartament" situata in Pantelimon, dar care apare intr-o hotarare de guvern ca fiind acreditata pe adoptii. Dan Vasile dorea atunci adoptarea unui copil, fara sa precizeze numele sau locul in care se afla acesta. In august 2002 - la trei luni de la depunerea dosarului - Dan Vasile fixeaza "tinta" si mentioneaza in dosar numele Alexandrei. In aceasta perioada - contrar legislatiei - o familie din Elvetia ajunge in Romania si ia contact cu micuta internata in institutia statului! O viziteaza la caminul din Giurgiu, desi Alexandra deja figura in grija unor asistenti maternali. Mai mult, desi nu exista consimtamantul mamei, desi copilul fusese considerat drept neadoptabil, iar in Romania era perioada de "embargo" in ceea ce priveste adoptiile internationale, dosarul "Romanian New Family" nu a fost nici clasat si nici respins! Asa s-a ajuns ca elvetienii sa creada ca vor deveni parintii adoptivi ai fetitei. Cei doi s-au indragostit la prima vedere de micuta aflata la centrul de plasament din Giurgiu. Au primit asigurari de la "Romanian New Family" ca problema va fi rezolvata. Ba chiar au primit si cateva fotografii. In cele trei imagini, fetita este prezentata ca la piata - o persoana imbracata intr-un halat (probabil o asistenta) arata copilul ca pe un trofeu. Il tine la departare ca la o prezentare de produs, gen teleshopping. Asistenta zambeste, fetita e speriata si pare ametita. Imaginile sunt facute profesionist, in sensul in care pe fundal nu exista vreun obiect care sa demaste locatia. Aceste imagini au ajuns la familia din Elvetia care a inceput sa amenajeze "camera fiicei". Au amenajat-o degeaba, deoarece fetita nu a mai ajuns in Elvetia. Un tribunal a admis cererea unei familii de romani care o doreau pe Alexandra.

Elvetienii sustin ca pentru adoptarea micutei din Giurgiu au platit 9.000 de euro! "Acest copil traieste in inimile noastre si camera ei a ramas pregatita in toti acesti patru ani", spun elvetienii. Sotii Bosshart se plang: "Nu intelegem situatia, atata timp cat am inregistrat cererea noastra la Guvernul Romaniei in 2002 si am platit deja 9.000 USD pentru a o adopta pe Alexandra". In urma cu cateva zile, elvetienii nu au mai suportat situatia. Asta, mai ales pentru ca "intermediarul" din Romania luase, din nou, legatura cu ei si le propusese o noua afacere. De aceasta data, intr-o scrisoare trimisa de curand, Dan Aurelian Vasile le propunea un alt copil. El sfatuia familia elvetiana sa isi stabileasca un domiciliu in Romania, sa infiinteze o firma aici, sa "treaca de 2-3 ori prin Romania" si "vom avea custodia copilului imediat ce vom obtine permisul de sedere permanenta". In fine, elvetienii erau avertizati ca pentru aceasta "adoptie" "costurile se ridica la aproximativ 9.000-12.000 de dolari". Elvetienii mai spun ca nu sunt singurii in acest stadiu - "mai multe familii din tara noastra au inceput astfel de demersuri in vederea adoptiei unui copil din Romania". Si toti au primit fotografii cu "marfurile".

Dan Aurel Vasile, cel care reprezinta societatea de adoptii "Romanian New Family", este cunoscut "in bransa" ca avocat. Omul, insa, nu a fost de gasit in inregistrarile Baroului Bucuresti. Firma este "de apartament" in cartierul Pantelimon. Iar la telefonul asociatiei nu raspunde nimeni.

Despre noile atacuri ale traficantilor de copii romani, Oficiul Roman de Adoptii (ORA) spune ca "acestea nu mai au nicio sansa, mai ales ca legislatia s-a schimbat de curand, iar Oficiul supravegheaza atent situatia". Secretarul de stat Teodora Bertzi, seful ORA spune, mai mult, ca a trimis Parchetului si Ministerului Administratiei si Internelor mai multe cazuri in care exista suspiciuni de trafic de copii. "Colaboram cu Parchetul pe aceste spete, iar cazul Alexandrei mi se pare un caz tipic pentru ceea ce s-a intamplat, in trecut, in Romania", declara secretarul de stat - "Atunci au existat situatii in care familii straine erau induse in eroare ca ar fi putut sa adopte copii din Romania in orice conditii. Asta pentru ca intermediarii au speculat anumite carente din perioada moratoriului". Confrom Teodorei Bertzi, in acest moment familiile care insista sa adopte un copil din Romania sunt informate de ORA privind situatia juridica actuala in ceea ce priveste institutia adoptiei. "Ii sfatuim pe straini sa se intereseze la Oficiul Roman pentru Adoptii despre conditiile legale, decat sa mearga pe mana intermediarilor", a mai spus Teodora Bertzi.
razvan.popa@gandul.info
 

The Baby Houses and Orphanages of Kazakhstan

The Baby Houses and Orphanages of Kazakhstan

By Cindy Harding
Executive Director, World Partners Adoption, Inc.
www.worldpartnersadoption.org

Kazakhstan has an excellent reputation of caring for their children who live in their orphanage system. Often when the children leave the orphanage or baby house through adoption, there are many bittersweet tears from the staff and caregivers, since they love these children so dearly and will miss them- yet they only want them to have a happy life. When post placement reports are sent back and pictures of the children are given to the baby house, the caregivers remember each of the children by name and are delighted to see them thriving in their new homes. Many US doctors have commented on the good care of the children upon their arrival home, and one is even quoted as saying, "We aren't sure what Kazakhstan does right, or what other countries do wrong." They are amazed at how well the children look upon arrival home after being adopted, saying these children do not look like typical children who have lived in an orphanage setting.

There are multiple reasons that children are living in these institutionalized settings, called Baby houses in Kazakhstan, such as relinquishment or termination of parental rights, abandonment, death of birth parents, economic strife, unwed birth mothers, as well as a number of other reasons. When children are abandoned, either at birth or later, the custodianship and guardianship bodies of the local Departments of Education try to locate the child's birth parents, but often time the birth mother has left false information, making it impossible to locate her. In some regions, Hospital officials will go to the address that the birth mother gave at the time of admission, but often they are unsuccessful in finding the birth mother or any other family members. In the case of abandonment, the Akim, Hospital or Department of Health (Depending on the region) will write up an abandonment act which will allows the child to be placed into the Baby House. If a child is considered to be a "foundling" meaning literally "found" outside of the police station, hospital, park, etc. with no identifying information, the Ministry of Internal Affairs (the Militia) will try to find the birth parents or some family member who can be responsible for the child. If they are unsuccessful in their attempts to find a family member, the child is placed for adoption. The children must be on the local registry for 3 months and then on the national registry for 3 more months before they can be adopted internationally. The youngest child to be adopted from Kazakhstan will be at least 6 months old. Not all of the children living in the orphanages are cleared for adoption because parents have written a letter or family comes to visit them from time to time.

All orphans from birth up to 3-4 years old are placed into the Baby Houses regardless of whether they were born in a maternity hospital, the children's hospitals, sent from the hospital or Center for "foundlings" which is regulated by the Ministry of Internal affairs, or directly from their homes where the parental rights have been terminated or relinquished. Once the children are 4 years old, they are moved to a Preschool Orphanage for children age 4-7. The children age 7-16 live in an Orphanage, which is sometimes called a Children's Home. The Baby Houses typically house 60-130 children at a time depending on the budget provided by the Department of Health. Some orphanages in the larger cities can have as many as 400 children residing.

The Baby Houses are unique due to their staff and daily routines with the children. The baby houses are staffed with doctors and nurses and specialists such as speech therapists, physical therapists, neurologists, massage therapists, music teachers, and nannies. It is similar to a residential medical facility. The children have three full meals per day along with 3 snacks per day. Infants, of course, are on their own feeding schedule. The children are divided into groups according to their ages. There are typically 8-12 children per group depending on their age and there is one primary caregiver per group and 2 nannies to care for them at all time. Each child is assigned a primary caregiver so the child is able to establish a bond with someone in the important early stages of brain development and attachment. The daily routine of the children, while a very strict schedule, allows them to engage in playtime with their friends, attend music lessons twice per week, learn dances and poems, and work with a speech therapist every day for up to 30 minutes! Children under one year of age work with a massage therapist and physical therapist routinely to
aid them in developing gross motor skills and muscle development. This interaction with these specialists provides stimulation, which allows them to learn musical patterns, sing memorized songs, enhance gross and fine motor skills, improve receptive and expressive language, and have interaction that will help them with their cognitive and emotional development. Around the holidays or special occasions the children wear costumes and will put on performances to a variety of audiences!

The Preschool Orphanages are much like the baby house in terms of staff, but there are more teachers because the children have a school like setting where they learn academic skills. There are many different activities that include things like arts and crafts, physical play, dance lessons, music lessons, and many other activities to keep the children engaged and well rounded. The children age 7-16 live in orphanages, or Children's Home. The children attend school starting at the age of 7. Up to Middle School, they have their own special school within their setting and do not attend regular school. For the few children who attend High School, they attend the local High School in the city where they live. In the orphanages, in addition to their school, the children also attend music lessons and dance, participate in competitions, participate in sports, and go on field trips.

The Baby Houses and Orphanages are often very stark in the outside appearance, however the inside walls are typically covered with colorful murals of animals and characters which creates a child friendly environment. The baby houses and orphanages are very clean and free of debris, and toys are neatly stored on shelves. The building is usually a two-story facility that has a full kitchen, laundry room, play rooms, therapy rooms, and bedrooms where the children are grouped by age. Several children sleep in the same room in separate beds, which are lined up in rows. The outside often has a playground and a covered area that seats many children for outside play. Often times the playground and outside equipment is in need of updating and repair, however, the orphanage budget does not have the money to replace or repair the equipment, so they do the best with what they have.

The workers are very protective of the children's health, as an illness can quickly spread creating an epidemic throughout the entire house. The children are sent to the hospital for fevers and other illness we might consider to be minor because the caregivers are trying to keep all of the children free from getting sick. The workers are also very careful with the people that come into contact with the children and enter the baby house so they can limit the exposure to germs to the children.

Kazakhstan's first lady Sara Alpysovna Nazarbaeva is the President of "Bobek" Children's Foundation, established in 1992, and is the winner of The International I. Dogramachi World Health Organization Prize and The International Unity Prize. She has dedicated her life to underprivileged children, and has taken upon herself the responsibility for thousands of orphaned and handicapped children. She has created this foundation to help mother and child care, provide supervision of foundling homes and orphanages, provide equipment and supplies to schools, aid gifted children from low-income families, and assist to the child health care system. In 1997 she launched the first National Children's Rehabilitation Center and the "SOS Children's Villages of Kazakhstan" which are the family villages for orphans. Mrs. Nazarbaeva plans on building these children's villages so the orphaned children can live in a family setting. These children's villages consist of several houses build together in a group where many children live in one house with several caretakers. Mrs. Nazarbaeva understands the need for the family, and her plans for the children's villages will enable the orphaned children to grow up in a family atmosphere.

With this type of dedication to the children, stemming all the way from the top of the political structure, it is no doubt the children are so well cared for in Kazakhstan. This is a country that deeply loves it's children and wants what is best for them. It is with great honor that adoption agencies are able to work in this beautiful, kind, and compassionate country. We support them by assisting in providing loving homes and care for these precious orphaned children of Kazakhstan who are so loved by their country.
 

 

`Mistaken orphan' to meet lost father after 34 years

`Mistaken orphan' to meet lost father after 34 years
 
 
By Bruce Ward, Canwest News ServiceMay 30, 2009
 
 
OTTAWA - Thirty-four years after he was mistakenly whisked away from a Saigon orphanage, Thanh Campbell - Orphan 32 - is returning to his homeland.
Campbell, one of 57 children spirited from a Saigon orphanage to Canada in April 1975, is returning Saturday to be reunited with his biological father and the brothers who never stopped searching for him after losing him in the chaotic fall of Saigon.
``The anticipation is from something you never think could possibly happen and is actually happening. I just think of my father and how long it has been for him, searching,'' said Thanh, who is travelling with his wife, Karina, their four children, and his adoptive father William Campbell.
The flight arrives Sunday evening, and Thanh expects to meet his father and brothers Monday morning.
``I think, first of all, what's the reaction going to be from family members over there? What's their first impression going to be like? I don't speak the language. How can you express yourself through an interpreter and get them (his biological family) to know you?''
Thanh knows the broad strokes of his early life, told to him by his birth father after discovering him two years ago thanks to an astonishing chain of events.
As Nguyen Ngoc Minh Thanh, he was airlifted to Canada in April 1975, with a copy of his birth certificate tied to his wrist. It showed Thanh's second birthday was still months away.
The child listed as Orphan 32 had been taken to a Saigon orphanage with two of his older brothers because their parents thought it was a safe haven during the fall of the city.
But when they went to reclaim their children, Thanh was gone - mistakenly placed among a group of orphans sent abroad for adoption, likely to the United States.
Thanh was adopted by Rev. William Campbell, a Presbyterian minister, and his wife, Maureen, and grew up in Cambridge, Ont.
But in 2003 he connected with Trent Kilner, who had been on that fateful flight out of Saigon.
The two tracked down 44 of the 57 people on that plane, and after the photos and story of the orphans' 2006 reunion was covered by a Vietnamese magazine, Thanh got an e-mail from someone saying he could be Thanh's brother.
``Everyone see you very very like my brother . . . My father still keep Thanh's birth certificate. If you have some information like that, please contact with us.''
The original and the copy of the birth certificate matched. DNA testing carried out by a Toronto company proved the genetic link. Thanh had found his biological father and family.
Thanh uses the word ``providence'' to describe his astounding journey.
``It's more than just a father reuniting with a son. It goes beyond that. We want to see the country, we want to meet the people. We also want to be able to share who we are.''
Ottawa Citizen

Paris implicated in Zoe's Ark orphan fraud?

Paris implicated in Zoe's Ark orphan fraud?
Sat, 30 May 2009 02:07:25 GMT
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The Zoe's Ark head Eric Breteau