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More adopted Russian kids at risk: Texas parents suspected of abuse

More adopted Russian kids at risk: Texas parents suspected of abuse

Published time: April 03, 2013 11:41

Two teenage Russian girls have been removed from their adoptive parents and placed in a foster family as Texan authorities begin a probe into suspected threats and possible sexual abuse.

The investigation was confirmed by the Texas Department for Family and Protective Services, Russian news services reported. According to officials the incident took place in the town of Silsbee.

Russia’s Investigative Committee - tasked with oversight in especially important and resonant cases – said on Wednesday that it was starting its own probe in connection with the reports of violence against adopted Russian kids.

Italiaadozioni.it, il nuovo sito dedicato a chi vuole adottare

Italiaadozioni.it, il nuovo sito dedicato a chi vuole adottare

12/12/2011 BY DARIA DOMENICI LEAVE A COMMENT

“L’utilità del portale è quella di dare più informazioni possibili a chi a vario titolo incontra l’adozione. Abbiamo pensato infatti, che non solo i genitori, ma ad esempio anche i pediatri o gli insegnanti, così importanti per i nostri figli, possono trovare nel sito un primo aiuto.” Così Maurizio Mazzoni, responsabile di www.italiaadozioni.it, spiega come è nata l’esigenza di riunire tutte le voci sull’adozione in un unico sito.

ItaliaAdozioni, che nasce grazie alla collaborazione di un gruppo di persone che hanno in comune la passione e l’attenzione per il mondo dell’adozione, punta molto sul passaparola: oltre a commentare le notizie del blog, i visitatori sono anche invitati a fornire contributi e pareri.

Oltre a informazioni utili per chi intraprende il percorso dell’adozione, il sito affronta le questioni legali (con una raccolta di leggi e sentenza in materia), quelle mediche, psicologiche, quelle relative al percorso di inserimento del bambino in famiglia e a scuola.

Brasile: Patricia Lamego destituita dall’incarico di Coordinatrice dell’Autorità Centrale

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Data: 02-04-13

Brasile: Patricia Lamego destituita dall’incarico di Coordinatrice dell’Autorità Centrale

Come pubblicato dalla Gazzetta Ufficiale del Brasile (Diário Oficial da União), è di martedì 26 marzo la destabilizzante notizia che Patricia Lamego, Coordinatrice per le adozioni internazionali presso l’ACAF (Autorità Centrale Amministrativa Federale), è stata esonerata dal suo incarico.

Alla base dell’esonero ci sarebbero state divergenze di opinioni tra Patrizia Lamego e la Ministra dei Diritti Umani Maria do Rosario, da cui dipende la stessa Autorità Centrale.

Withdrawal of authorization to the association L'Airone Onlus. Cancellation from the Register

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Date: 13/03/28

Withdrawal of authorization to the association L'Airone Onlus. Cancellation from the Register

With Resolution no. 6/2013/AE/AUT/Revoca of 19 March 2013, the Commission for International Adoptions has revoked the association L'Airone Onlus the authorization referred to in Article 39b of the Adoption Law, resulting from cancellation ' register of authorized bodies.

With Resolution no. 7/2013/AE/SG the same date, pursuant to Article 16 of Presidential Decree 108/07, the Commission has also decided to take charge of the pending proceedings relating to couples who, at the date of communication of the decision, appear to have given The Heron Onlus association task.

DOS Adoption Alert: Serbia Adoption

DOS Adoption Alert: Serbia Adoption

March 29, 2013

ALERT: SERBIA ADOPTION

U.S. Embassy Belgrade has received reports that one or more U.S. adoption agencies may be giving prospective adoptive parents misleading information about the process of adoption in Serbia.

Serbia places a priority on domestic adoption. The only children who are generally available for intercountry adoption are children with special needs. There are no adoption agencies authorized to offer adoption services in Serbia, and families should not seek to work with an intermediary. You are strongly encouraged to read the Serbia adoption country information, which outlines the only way to adopt children from Serbia.

Madonna back in Malawi

Madonna back in Malawi

CATEGORY: NATIONAL NEWS WRITTEN BY MABVUTO BANDA

Maddona

US pop star Madonna arrived in Malawi Monday morning amid accusations of abandoning construction of a multi-million dollar girls’ school.

Madonna has not been in Malawi for the last two years and now faces a new administration under President Joyce Banda.

Child removal results in violence accusations against council

Child removal results in violence accusations against council

Ray Weaver
    Child advocates say the council went too far when it forcibly removed a girl from a foster home  
In a screen grab from a video the Keller family provided to Politiken, 'Amy' is shown being forced into a vehicle against her will by council employees (Screenshot: Politiken)

The video is tough to look at.

A young girl fights and kicks while two adults, a man and a woman, forcibly remove her from a home while she screams and cries in fear. Two police officers stand and watch as the drama unfolds. The video (see it here) and a series of articles in Politiken newspaper have exposed the plight of 'Amy', who was forcibly removed from the foster home where she had been living and sent to an institutional home in Næstved. Many are saying that the child’s civil rights have been violated.

Børns Vilkår, a child service organisation, has reported the Næstved Council to the police, charging them with violence against Amy.

"We do not believe that the council has the legal right to forcibly remove Amy," Børns Vilkår's chairperson Peter Albæk told Politiken. “She had already been forcibly removed from one home, and now they have taken her from another.”

In 2009, Amy was adopted by a Danish family from her birthplace in Ethiopia. She was nine years old at the time - on paper, at least, though later physical exams indicated her real age might be a few years older. After the situation with Amy’s adoptive family went bad when she was eleven, including allegations of physical abuse, Amy was removed from the adoptive family's home and placed in a temporary foster home with Hanne and Ole Keller. The Kellers act as a so-called “acute family”, taking in children that are in critical situations.

Albæk said that decision to remove Amy from the Keller home has left the child isolated from the few adults that she trusts.

Although Amy had said numerous times that she wanted to stay with the Kellers, the council decided that she should be placed in an institutional residence with professional educators.

The video shows what happened when representatives from Næstved came to remove Amy from the foster home.

The Kellers told Politiken that they had repeatedly called the council asking for help in explaining to Amy why she would have to live elsewhere when she wanted to stay with them.

“I had to tell her I did not know why she had to leave because no one ever gave me an explanation,” Hanne Keller told Politiken. Keller said that Amy had endured traumatic events while in an Ethiopian orphanage and had become attached to the foster family.

The council says that it acted properly and in turn reported the Kellers to the police, saying that their behaviour was at least in part responsible for any trauma Amy experienced. The family may also face legal trouble for filming the removal and providing it to the media.

“We are obviously concerned that Børns Vilkår has reported us to the police," Næstved Council's child and culture director Per B Christensen told Politiken. “The police were present when the child was removed and I believe that the council was within its rights and used only the amount of force that was necessary.”

Christensen said that if the Kellers had worked with the council, it would not have been necessary to use force to remove Amy.

“We regret that the situation around Amy’s moving was so unpleasant, but there were adults, including the foster family, who should have taken more responsibility,” Christensen told Politiken.

Lisbeth Zornig, the head of Børnerådet, a children’s rights group, said that the type of action taken with Amy should only be used in the most serious situations.

Law professor Kirsten Ketscher from the University of Copenhagen told Politiken – without knowing the details of the case – that Næstved Council may have over stepped its bounds.

“You must not use physical violence against children. You must have a legal basis to exercise force against other people - including children," said Ketscher.

The social and integration minister, Karen Haekkerup (Socialdemokraterne), told Politiken that she wants an investigation into the actions taken by Næstved Council.

Journalist assaulted after adoption case

INFORMAL TRANSLATION, published in Danish in Politiken
Journalist assaulted after adoption case
Politiken contact in Addis Ababa, which helped to reveal orphanage, was beaten and had a hospital.

To Romania With Love: Four Years Coming Home

To Romania With Love: Four Years Coming Home

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The train leaves Bucharest in the evening, and as night falls the last views of modern Romania fade from view. We are carried through the night, across the Transylvanian Alps, and fifty years into the past. As dawn comes to Transylvania, farmers are seen riding high atop horse and ox-drawn wagons piled with straw and firewood. The wagons are stopped at rail crossings by manually operated gates, rigged with extensive cables and pulleys so that a solitary man can close the gates on both sides of the track from one spot. The smell of smoke from fireplaces and wood stoves is carried in the air. As the train slowly pulls to its last stop on the long journey, I listen intently, wondering whether the modern diesel engine which pulled us out of Bucharest had been transformed into a coal-fired steam locomotive during the night. Within a few hours I am greeting the director of the Camin Spital pentru Minori Deficient (literally, the Home for Deficient Children) in Sighetu Marmatiei, Romania. After a cool welcome, I a m given permission to see the children.

A few moments later, as I climbed the stairs to the second floor, I remembered the pledge Anne had made four years ago to Alex and Costica, and which I had repeated to them two years ago: "we will come back for you." I wondered whether Alex and Costica would even remember me after this time, and whether they would believe I was really going to take them with me this time. I slowly opened the door and stepped in. As with any outsider, my entrance immediately commanded the attention of all the children in the room. Whatever activities had been going on ceased, and an aura of excitement spread through the room. Children began running in from adjacent rooms to see who was here, and in a very short time I saw Costica's face appear for the briefest of moments. As he disappeared back into the other room, I heard his overpowering screams of "Alex! Alex! Alex!"

Liberian actor sues UNICEF for child abuse

Liberian actor sues UNICEF for child abuse

A Liberian actor has filed a $25 million lawsuit against UNICEF for alleged child abuse over his starring role aged 13 in a fundraising film as a murderous child soldier who tortures his victims.

Mike James, now 28, says he and other cast members have been "stigmatised as rebels, killers, cannibals and drug addicts" after being recruited for the 1997 film "Soldier Boy" and made to act out eating human body parts.

In a writ filed in a west African human rights court earlier this month, James says he was paid $300 by a Danish production team hired by UNICEF for the docu-drama and duped into believing it would get limited distribution when in fact it went worldwide.

The UN child protection agency's Liberian office provided "active support and collaboration" to the Danish crew which recruited children from schools and orphanages to act in the short film, the writ says.