вторник, 24 мая 2016 г.

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Children are like flowers they blossom in the family, like flowers in the garden, everyone deserves a family http://adoptionua.com/ukraine-adoption/ Ukraine adoption

Flowers Ukraine


среда, 17 февраля 2016 г.

assist vulnerable families -- rather than funding orphanages

Governments, faith-based groups and churches, aid agencies and volunteer tourists, who donate cash and goods to orphanages or build and refurbish children's homes and other institutions, may be inadvertently funding human trafficking.
Poor and disabled children, locked away and out of sight from families and their communities, are sitting ducks for traffickers and pedophiles. And nefarious staff are often the beneficiaries of perverse transactions where captive children are the commodity.
My organization, Disability Rights International (DRI), recently released a report -- "No Way Home: The Exploitation and Abuse of Children in Ukraine's Orphanages" -- following a three year investigation of the plight of children living in institutional care.
DRI found that children are at risk of being trafficked for sex, labor, pornography and organs in a country that is a known hub for human trafficking.
Some 82,000 children are said to live in these facilities, although no one seems to know for sure. Some Ukrainian activists put the number closer to 200,000.
The 2014 U.S. State Department's Trafficking in Persons Report (TIP) stated that, "Children in orphanages and crisis centers continue to be particularly vulnerable to trafficking within Ukraine."
Inside orphanages, DRI found rampant sexual violence, abuse and rape were commonplace. Children are often recruited directly from orphanages for sex and labor according anti-trafficking organizations in Ukraine.
"There's huge sexual abuse within the orphanages... So this is a push factor that gets children involved in sexual exploitation, even before they grow up. They're already used to sexual abuse," said a Ukraine counter-trafficking expert.
Producers of child pornography go directly to orphanages to seek out their prey. And institutionalized children with disabilities are particularly susceptible to becoming trafficked for their organs. One grandmother of a newborn with Down Syndrome was told by doctors that they could sell the baby for organs and get money.
Maria- - who grew up in an orphanage in Odessa -- fled at the age of 15, when she feared for her life.
"Children would go into the woods behind the building and disappear," she told DRI. "Every year 10 to 12 children went missing. We thought it was rapists and murderers. Some children were found dead but nothing was done. The staff never asked 'why'?"
In notorious orphanage number five, a "sauna/massage parlor" was run out of the basement of the facility where the children were bought and sold for sex. The operation was shut down in 2012 but the orphanage remains open, with many of the victims still living there.
Condemned to a life of isolation and neglect, children with disabilities are transferred to adult psychiatric facilities or nursing homes when they are about 16 years old, where they will stay until they die. But those with little or no disabilities "graduate" and are ill-equipped to face life on their own. They are particularly vulnerable to be trafficked right off the street and often there are traffickers waiting for them outside the orphanage doors when they leave.
DRI interviewed former orphanage residents, many living on the streets and in sewers in Odessa and Kiev. They spoke of the sexual and physical violence, beatings and forced labor they had been subjected to as children living in orphanages.
"I was raped and then I raped other boys who were younger. I don't want to talk about it," said one orphan graduate.
"My friend in the orphanage was raped, but the police never came. I meet many orphans on the street who have escaped orphanages because the staff scare them," said another.
Orphan graduates complained of having to work in the fields, up to 12 hours a day, on orphanage-owned farms. Some said they were beaten if they refused to do assigned work and others were sent home with staff to cook and clean in their homes -- all without pay.
The revenue stream generated from isolated orphans even extends to so-called volun-tourism and orphan vacations - highly suspect and unregulated programs whereby well-intentioned westerners pay to volunteer in orphanages for a few weeks or take a child into their home for a vacation from the orphanage.
Unencumbered access to already emotionally frail children further exposes them to traffickers and pedophiles. DRI interviewed one U.S. family who paid $2,900 to host two, young Ukrainian orphan girls, without any home visit or background check.
There is a myriad of social science and children's rights research documenting the many dangers and consequences of raising children in orphanages and institutions around the world. And the human trafficking of children living in orphanages is not just a Ukraine problem, but a global one.
No donor would ever intentionally help support such a heinous crime. But until the flow of money is diverted to assist vulnerable families -- rather than funding orphanages -- that is exactly what is being done.

 http://www.huffingtonpost.com/laurie-ahern/ukraine-orphanages-feeder_b_7344882.html

desire to adopt and we’re definitely considering it

Just when you thought the Duggar family couldn’t get any bigger Jill Dillard has revealed she wants to adopt! The former “19 Kids and Counting” star shared her plans alongside husband Derick Dillard in a preview for episode 3 of TLC’s “Jill & Jessa: Counting On” Sunday.
Episode 2 of the three-part Duggar special followed Derick, 26, and Jill, 24, as they traveled with their son Israel to Central America for an extended mission trip. The promo video for the episode 3 shows the couple will spend time at a children’s home working alongside orphaned kids. It is then that Derick reveals he, like Jill’s sister Jessa Seewald and her husband Ben, would like to adopt.
“I can definitely relate to Jessa and Ben’s desire to adopt and we’re definitely considering it,” Ben says.
“Who knows? We came down to Central America as a family of three. We could go home as a family of four,” Jill teases.
Jessa, now 23, and Ben, 20, opened up about their desire to adopt in episode 2. The couple shared they had been looking into adoption before discovering Jessa was pregnant. When they found out they were expecting, they were told they must wait until their child is at least 9 months old to continue the process.
This isn’t the first time Jessa and Ben have discussed adoption. “If God blesses us with biological kids of our own, it’s not going to quench our desire to adopt,” Jessa told People in February prior to announcing her pregnancy. “We hope to adopt a lot of kids.”
The rest of the “Counting On” finale, titled "Counting One More," will follow Jessa and Ben as they pose for a maternity photoshoot. Viewers will also see the arrival of their son, Spurgeon Elliot, who was born Nov. 5. Episode 3 of "Jill & Jessa: Counting On" airs Sunday at 9 p.m. EST on TLC.
 
 http://www.ibtimes.com/jill-dillard-teases-baby-no-2-plans-duggar-considering-adoption-mission-trip-2234339
 

couple was transporting the infant abroad to give to another family

Around 07:00 a.m. a Mercedes crossed the Ukraine-Polish border. On board were a husband and wife - both German citizens - two young children and an 5-day old infant girl.
The husband told authorities that he was father of the newborn child, the mother of whom is Ukrainian. He presented a certificate of birth and a notarized letter by the infant's mother allowing him to take the infant abroad. Ukrainian Border Service agents were suspicious and began checking their database.
Oleh Slobodyan, Deputy Head of Ukrainian Border Guard Service: "The border guards were suspicious because the German couple had never travelled to Ukraine and the mother of the infant had never travelled to Europe. So they never could have met in person."
Ivan Galkin, Border Guard Service press officer: "No proof was provided that the husband was, in fact, the father of the infant. So, the incident is tantamount to the illegal transportation of a child abroad. We have already notified the police."
Those apprehended told a different version of events after being questioned:
Detained woman: "We wanted another child, and why not? Oksana promised that this was possible. She discussed this with the mother of the infant, about giving her away, and said that she already had a daughter and was not able to care for two children."
Detained man: "I found from the agency that she is the real legal mother and decided to adopt the infant. To do a deed and raise her. But it turned that I was led astray by the documents. I didn't kidnap any child and had not intention to do so. I just wanted to do a good deed."
It is now known that the infant was born a Lviv maternity ward. And a certificate of birth was isssued. The detained individuals said that they paid USD 150 dollars to a middleman and hryvnia 10,000 to the infant's mother. Police are looking for them.
The infant's mother is from Zarkarpattia region, but lived in Kyiv. Meanwhile, police have opened a criminal investigation. The investigators assume that the couple was transporting the infant abroad to give to another family. The German couple are being questioned and infant girl has been in temporary custody.

 http://uatoday.tv/society/lviv-police-investigate-illegal-adoption-ring-483482.html


happy to be a mom, finally

An Alabama family caught up in the turmoil in Ukraine as it adopted four children there has finally been reunited in the United States, reports WGCL, the CBS station in Atlanta.
Lisa Bundy and the last of the children to get approval to leave the country, Nastia, returned to the United States on Friday. After three weeks apart, the family met at the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport.
"It is really great to get all of us together," said her husband, David, a photographer. "I can't express how happy I am now. I don't think it hit me yet."
The couple, of Montgomery, decided a year ago that they wanted to adopt the children, Nastia, Karina, Max and Alla. When they arrived in Kiev in November, they were not overly concerned by the protests in Independence Square, a half a mile from where they were staying.

bundy-family.jpg
The Bundy family on a walk in Kiev on Feb. 21, 2013.
David Bundy

But as situation grew violent, the newly formed family of six hunkered down inside their small apartment waiting for the paperwork to go through, Mike Paluska of WGCL reports.
"You could hear everything, the bombs, the Molotov cocktails, the gun fire," Lisa Bundy said. "We went out one time, and apparently there were snipers and we didn't know it until we got back to the apartment."
The family got the final documents approved for Karina, Max and Alla, all siblings, on Feb. 23. Lisa Bundy remained with Nastia when the others departed until the last child could leave too.
"With the things going on politically in Ukraine, now with Crimea and with Russia it is very worrisome, David Bundy said. "I didn't know if the government was going to be disrupted to the point where we wouldn't get the things we needed to get done to complete the adoption."
Said Lisa Bundy: "God bless America. I am happy to be a mom, finally."

 http://www.cbsnews.com/news/family-adopts-four-children-amidst-upheaval-in-ukraine/

when children become orphans ...

It’s hard enough for a child to lose a parent under any circumstances, but when children become orphans in a war zone, their future becomes even more uncertain.
That’s why one family in Lyme is trying to help children caught in conflict in Ukraine. Dianna and Douglas Hampton-Dowson turned to social media and created a GoFundMe page to raise nearly $8,000 to host three Ukrainian orphans for three weeks.

Dima, Anya and Dasha are 14, 12 and 7 years old but they have already known profound loss in their young lives. The siblings are growing up in a government-run orphanage in Mariupol, Ukraine. It’s unclear exactly how their mother died, and no relatives have stepped forward to care for them.
“They’ve been in terrible situations,” Dianna explained. “The shelter they were staying in was actually bombed at one point, and they were in the shelter when that happened.”

With two young children of their own, Dianna and Douglas aren’t sure if they can commit to adoption just yet, but thought the Frontier Horizon travel program was one way to make a difference.
“Just to be able to take them away from that even for a short period of time was very important to us,” said Dianna.

The children arrived in time for Christmas; the Hampton-Downsons treated them to the American version of the holiday but also recreated a traditional Ukrainian Christmas celebration. They toured the submarine base in Groton, visited New York City and went horseback riding at a nearby farm.
A smartphone translation app helped the adults overcome the language barrier, but Douglas says the children didn’t need it with each other.