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Haitian boy’s new family in Lolo struggles to pay the bills

Haitian boy’s new family in Lolo struggles to pay the bills

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By MICHAEL MOORE of the Missoulian | Posted: Monday, February 8, 2010 11:20 pm | (6) Comments

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Nach der Erdbeben-Hölle von Haiti klagt ein Vater an Menschenhändler haben meine kleine Theresa Jenny entführt

Nach der Erdbeben-Hölle von Haiti klagt ein Vater an Menschenhändler haben meine kleine Theresa Jenny entführt

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Vater
Erdbeben-Hölle Haiti
Amerikaner wegen angeblichen Kindesraubes festgenommen
Antonie Jonny klagt an: Menschenhändler haben meine Tochter entführt
Foto: Reuters
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08.02.2010 - 13:38 UHR

BANGLADESH - Adoption law ‘needs revision,’ says nun (Mujibor)

BANGLADESH - Adoption law ‘needs revision,’ says nun

Published Date: February 8, 2010

Adoption law ‘needs revision,’ says nun thumbnail

Infants at the St. Benedict Creche

CHITTAGONG, Bangladesh (UCAN) — The present adoption law in Bangladesh does little to help couples who want to adopt orphans and hence needs revision, says a nun who works for abandoned children.

Zwei Kinder sitzen in Chile fest, weil ihre Adoptiveltern nach dem Erdbeben sofort helfen wollten.

Zwei Kinder sitzen in Chile fest, weil ihre Adoptiveltern nach dem Erdbeben sofort helfen wollten.

Von Romina Lenzlinger | Aktualisiert um 00:48 | 07.02.2010

Eigentlich sollten Talia* (1) und Samu* (3) heute Nachmittag im Flugzeug nach Zürich sitzen. Doch jetzt stecken die Geschwister aus Haiti mit ihrem Schweizer Adoptivvater in Chile fest – weit weg von ihren leiblichen Eltern in Port-au-Prince und weit weg von ihren vier älteren Geschwistern. Aber auch Tausende von Kilometern entfernt von ihrem neuen Zuhause im Kanton Zürich.

Den beiden winkt eine schöne Kindheit in der Schweiz. Ein Ehepaar aus dem Kanton Zürich will sie adoptieren. Die leiblichen Eltern von Talia und Samu waren damit einverstanden: Sie haben zu wenig Geld, um sechs hungrige Kinder zu ernähren.

Zunächst nahm alles seinen geordneten Lauf: Im Mai 2009 begann das langwierige Adoptionsverfahren in der Schweiz und in Haiti. Im November reisten die Schweizer nach Port-au-Prince und verbrachten mit den Kindern zwei intensive Wochen.

Court process for adoptions not tedious

Court process for adoptions not tedious

2010/02/07

THOSE who want to register adoptions in court should not fear the process.

Lawyer Andrew Suresh Thanaraja says the perception is that the court process is a long, tedious and public affair, but it is not true.

"Contrary to popular belief, the adoption procedures in courts are conducted in a very relaxed manner in chambers. It is very private.

The Real Grace Omaboe and Peace and Love Orphanage

The Real Grace Omaboe and Peace and Love Orphanage

By Kwabena Sarfo

Feature Article | Sat, 07 Feb 2009

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'US couple didn't tend to adopted kid'

'US couple didn't tend to adopted kid' Mayura Janwalkar / DNA, DNASaturday, February 6, 2010 0:24 IST Mumbai: Five years after the Bombay high court granted the guardianship of two abandoned minors to a US couple, it revoked its order in case of the older child observing that the couple had failed to fulfill their responsibility towards the child. Mita (name changed), now 14, was found abandoned at the Grant Road station along with her younger sister. As the children had no claimants, they were both declared free for adoption by the Child Welfare Committee. Subsequently, they were adopted by Wilbur and Jennifer Baker from Massachusetts, USA, with the high court’s sanction in April 2006. However, the court was informed that the couple had to send the child to a psychiatric care institution in the US, as she faced adjustment disorder, attention deficit, depressive condition and hyperactivity. The court was told when the couple refused to take her back home from the hospital, the American adoption agency Wide Horizons for Children (WHC) tried to place the child with another family but she was subsequently repatriated to India. Justice DY Chandrachud observed, “The Bakers have failed to perform their duties as a result of which Mita was repatriated.” The court then revoked the order of guardianship granted in their favour citing the abuse of the trust reposed in them. Mita had been lodged at the National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences in Bangalore since August 2008 after her repatriation. The court has now handed over her guardianship, protem to the director of the Family Service Centre and permitted them to shift her to Aarushi, a care centre in Gurgaon. The court also directed Jagannath Pati of the Central Adoption Regulatory Authority to take into account the suggestions put forth by the federation of adoption agencies and finalise the guidelines for foreign adoptions by March 26. The draft guidelines had suggested the generation of a safety fund for repatriated children from failed foreign adoptions. The court has sought progress reports of Mita’s sister also adopted by the bakers and bi-annual progress reports of Mita from her guardians.

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Bleak Portrait of Haiti Orphanages Raises Fears

Bleak Portrait of Haiti Orphanages Raises Fears

By GINGER THOMPSON

Published: February 6, 2010

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — The floors were concrete and the windows were broken.

A woman tended a baby recently at the Foyer of Zion orphanage, whose staff cares for more than 60 children who range in age from 2 months to 10 years old. More Photos >

More Haitian orphans coming to Utah

More Haitian orphans coming to Utah

By Brooke Adams

The Salt Lake Tribune

Updated: 02/06/2010 07:26:41 PM MST

Another 10 children from a Haitian orphanage are on their way to the U.S. with the help of a Utah adoption agency.

Joy for adopted twins after Immigration red-tape U-turn

  The Sunday Times 7:00PM

Joy for adopted twins after Immigration red-tape U-turn
From: February 06, 2010 Increase Text Size Decrease Text Size Print Email Share



TRUE SISTERS: Identical twins Rosabelle Glasby and Dorothy Loader have now been recognised as sisters by Immigration authorities. Picture: Supplied Source: PerthNowA YEAR ago, these identical twins were left heartbroken after authorities told them they were not officially related because they had been adopted as babies by different families.
This week they are celebrating after migration officials did a backflip, paving the way for the siblings to be reunited in WA. Carnarvon woman Rosabelle Glasby was devastated when told she could not bring her sister to Australia to live from Malaysia because the Department of Immigration and Citizenship did not consider them to be related.
Mrs Glasby and her sister, Dorothy Loader, who were adopted by different families soon after birth in Malaysia, were apart for nearly 50 years before finally meeting last year.
According to migration laws, the legal relationship between siblings - even identical twins - is severed when they are adopted out.
The Sunday Times revealed the case in January last year. But sorrow turned to joy this week when Federal Immigration and Citizenship Minister Chris Evans said he had intervened on compassionate grounds.


The move means Ms Loader, who has been living in WA on a bridging visa, can obtain a permanent visa to remain with her twin.
Mrs Glasby choked back tears this week, describing the visa approval as "wonderful news".
"We're identical twin sisters - we're the same egg," Mrs Glasby said. "It's hard to get anyone more related to me.
"Now, hopefully, we can be together for the rest of our lives. It's such a happy ending to a long, hard year dealing with the Immigration Department."
Mrs Glasby was adopted by a Dutch family and lived in Singapore until 1977, when she followed another adoptive sister to Perth as an 18-year-old. Following an arduous search for her twin that stretched two decades, Mrs Glasby located her and the pair finally met in Perth for an emotional reunion.
Having spent time in Australia and then Malaysia getting to know each another, Ms Loader said they were desperate to be together.
"We have a bond that perhaps only other identical twins can understand," she said. "We don't just want to be together, we need to be together; it is as strong as that."
Mrs Glasby, a former WA Health Department worker who now acts as a carer for her disabled husband, echoed the sentiments.
"She calls me the yin and I call her the yang - as a whole, we work together as one," she said. "We've totally bonded and we want to be together."
Mrs Glasby's husband, Marc, said he found it difficult to understand the department's policy in denying the original visa application.
"It doesn't make sense - I think the typical phrase is 'bureaucracy gone mad'," he said. "It's been a long time coming, but now we have this hope of a new life together. We always believed this was the country of the fair go."