Saturday, March 5, 2011

Ethiopia to cut international adoptions by 90%

(Not sure where this leaves us....)

Ethiopia to cut international adoptions by 90%

The Voice of America Web site is reporting that Ethiopia is planning to cut adoptions by 90 percent, processing only 5 children per day instead of 50. According to the report, this is based on a directive from the Ethiopian government, and an "alert" will be posted to the State Department's inter-country adoption Web site. (Note, other than the VOA report, I have not been able to verify the directive or the alert from the State Department. I am re-posting this solely on the credibility of Voice of America, an established news source.)

Here is the story in it's entirety.

Ethiopia is cutting back by as much as 90 percent the number of inter-country adoptions it will allow, as part of an effort to clean up a system rife with fraud and corruption. Adoption agencies and children's advocates are concerned the cutbacks will leave many Ethiopian orphans without the last-resort option of an adoptive home abroad.

Ethiopia's Ministry of Women's, Children's and Youth Affairs has issued a directive saying it will process a maximum of five inter-country adoptions a day, effective March 10. Currently, the ministry is processing up to 50 cases a day, about half of them to the United States.

A copy of the directive provided to VOA says the reduction of up to 90 percent in cases will allow closer scrutiny of documents used to verify a child's orphan status.

Ministry spokesman Abiy Ephrem says the action was taken in response to indications of widespread fraud in the adoption process.

"What we have seen so far has been some illegal practices. There is an abuse. There are some cases that are illegal. So these directives will pave the way to come up with [safeguards]," said Abiy Ephrem.

Investigations have turned up evidence of unscrupulous operators in some cases tricking Ethiopian parents to give up their children, then falsifying documents in order claim a part of the large fees involved in inter country adoptions.

American couples often pay more than $20,000 to adopt an Ethiopian child. Such amounts are an enormous temptation in a country where the average family earns a few hundred dollars a month.

U.S. State Department statistics show more than 2,500 Ethiopian orphans went to the United States last year. That is more than a ten fold increase over the past few years, making Ethiopia the second most popular destination for Americans seeking to adopt overseas, after China.

Child protection professionals generally welcomed efforts to clean up the system.

Some, however, questioned the motive behind the cutback. One adoption agency representative who asked not to be identified called the policy "ridiculous", and said it appears to be in retaliation for recent criticism of the government's lax oversight of the process.

Abigail Rupp, head of the consular section at the U.S. Embassy in Addis Ababa says the cutback is likely to result in a drop in adoptions to the United States from last year's 2,500 to fewer than 500. She says the biggest concern is for the estimated 1,000 children currently in the adoptions pipeline, who may be forced to wait more than a year for their cases to be considered.

"We share the government's concerns about the vulnerabilities in the process. But certainly we have concerns about children who would be waiting longer for their adoptions to be final. That would mean they would be in an orphanage or transition home for a longer period of time," she said.

Rupp said adoption agencies in Ethiopia should take the directive as a cue to be accountable for each case they bring forward, including knowing exactly how children in orphanages came to be there. She said government officials have indicated they may close as many as 45 orphanages as part of the effort to clean up what critics have labeled a "baby business".

Ted Chaiban, head of the Addis Ababa office of the U.N. children's agency UNICEF, called the new rules "an important step" in rooting out irregularities in the system and finding family-based local solutions for what the government estimates are 5 million Ethiopian orphans.

"What is important is that any child deemed to require care be looked at in terms of a range of options starting from family reunification all the way through inter country adoption. In that respect the work being done by the ministry needs to be strengthened and supported," he said.

U.S. Embassy officials late Friday indicated they are posting an adoption alert on the State Department's website addressing the concerns of Americans who will be affected by the Ethiopian government directive. The alert can be seen at www.adoptions.state.gov.

If true, this is difficult news for many children and families--particularly those who are already somewhere along the process (which include many good and close friends of mine).

First, please PRAY for the children. They are at the center of this decision and the ones impacted most dearly. There are too many orphans waiting for families. While I heartily support alternatives to adoption, simply cutting back by 90 percent will not will these into existence.

Second, reach out to a family that YOU know that is adopting from Ethiopia. This news will hit them like a sucker punch. Be a comfort for them. Many of them will walk an even more uncertain road, and will need someone to listen. They'll need to vent

Read more: http://blog.beliefnet.com/redletters/2011/03/ethiopia-to-cut-international-adoptions-by-90.html#ixzz1Fko01qBb

2 comments:

  1. Who comfort the mother of Ethiopia who lost her child. Some families witnessed Ethiopian mothers falling to the ground screaming when they couldn’t find their children; their children had already been taken away and been adopted.We Ethiopian will not rest until this corruption, child harvesting, baby-stealing, legal violations in international adoption, or adoption agency corruption shut down 100%.

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  2. lemlem, you are absolutely correct! No mother should have to go through that. Please know that no adoptive parent would want to take a child away from their family!!! That is why we have humanitarian aid and why many, many Americans sponsor children so that families can be preserved. We want families to be preserved. We want mothers to have their children. Unfortunately, there are many true orphans in Ethiopia. There are many children who do need a family. They are the ones who will suffer if adoption is halted.
    I completely agree that corruption should be shut down 100%. Ethiopia should not work with ANY agency who has been found to practice unethically.
    There are other things that can be done to stop corruption without punishing the children who do have families who want to love and care for them.
    Please know that I agree with you, and am praying that corruption can be stopped.

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