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Stop Export and Abuse of Children

J. Boeykens | 19.03.2007 17:11 | Social Struggles

Attempts by Western families to adopt children from poor nations have fuelled a rogue market in young lives - Petition



Delegation of the European Commission to the United Nations
EU-UN related questions
Madam Sarah Curran
Information Officer
222 East 41st Street 20th Floor New York, NY 10017
United States
( delegation-new-york-euinfo@ec.europa.eu)

Brussels, 19th Mars 2007

Dear Madam,

More than 900,000 children each year are victims of abuse or neglect, and research shows that this has far-reaching negative effects on our society. Children and youth who have been abused or neglected are more likely to use alcohol and drugs, fall victim to teen pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases, suffer from depression and mental illness, be involved with law enforcement, and abuse their own children. And the direct costs to our society for the damage resulting from child abuse and neglect are enormous.

Overseas adoption is big business, and growing: last year, more than 2,150 Ukrainian children and almost 8,000 Russian children were adopted to foreign countries. Most of those went to the US, where Russia is second only to China as a provider of adoptees and Ukraine ranks sixth. Italy and Spain adopt hundreds of children each year, as do Canadians.

In an industry fuelled by money and the desperation of would-be parents, and complicated by haphazard or non-existent regulations, private agencies and corruption among poorly paid officials, there are countless tales of fraud - babies sold twice to different families, adoption facilitators who have made off with thousands, mothers who were duped into giving up their newborns.

Romania, which 15 years ago had massive media coverage over the state of its orphanages, passed a law in July limiting foreign adoption to a child's grandparents. Last month, France and Romania set up a committee to help 130 French couples already in the process of adopting Romanian orphans.

I'm sure that you share my concern about child maltreatment and adoption, and recognize this as a tragedy that demands european and international leadership.

It's the best response to such an immense and complex issue and I believe is the most effective way to focus the public health and child welfare resources necessary to create a safe, caring, and healthy future for our children.

Sincerely,

YOUR NAME
YOUR ADDRESS/


To sign the petition:  http://www.thepetitionsite.com/takeaction/392408581

Info:  http://www.romania-forexportonly.blogspot.com
 http://fondationprincessedecroy.over-blog.org

J. Boeykens
- e-mail: janboeykens@hotmail.cm
- Homepage: http://groups.msn.com/WerkgroepMorkhoven

Comments

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Children for export

20.03.2007 13:42

The author of the book 'ROMANIA - FOR EXPORT ONLY' (The untold story of the Romanian 'orphans')
is Roelie Post.

She worked at the European Commission’s DG Enlargement, Romania Team.

She had been dealing with the issue of Children's rights and Minority Rights. This work involved the monitoring of these issues in the framework of Romania's accession to the European Union.
Also the programming of pre-accession assistance, the Phare Programme, on these issues was part of her tasks and she was in charge of street children in Romania.

According to Roelie Post, children are still too often put in care institutions without investigating the cause. Child protection is the responsibility of the States and their social systems, which are currently not responding sufficiently to the necessary requirements.
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Summary Report on the Symposium on Street children and youth as a priority of the EUs social inclusion policy for the new
Member States in Central and Eastern Europe organised by the European Foundation for Street Children Worldwide (EFSCW) on
9-10 December 2004, Brussels.

J. Boeykens
mail e-mail: janboeykens@hotmail.com