General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums‘The Child Catchers’: Evangelicals and the Fake-Orphan Racket
Babies for Sale
The Child Catchers: Evangelicals and the Fake-Orphan Racket
Apr 24, 2013 8:26 pm - by Kathryn Joyce
In 2009, a van from Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, carrying seven young children and babies, was stopped as it drove outside the rural, central Ethiopian town of Shashemene. The children in the van were wards of Better Future Adoption Services (BFAS), a U.S. adoption agency, and had been declared abandonedtheir families unknownin the capital city of Addis Ababa. Police outside Shashemene arrested seven adults riding in the van, including five BFAS employees. The staff, it appeared to some, had sought to process children who had living family as though they had been abandoned in another region of the country, so that their adoptions to the U.S. could proceed more quickly.
At the time, Ethiopia was in the midst of a dramatic international adoption boom, with the number of adoptions to U.S. parents rising from a few hundred per year in 2004 to more than 2,000 five years later, and around 4,000 worldwide.The boom had brought substantial revenue into the country, as agencies and adoptive parents supported newly-established orphanages that became an attractive child care option for poor families; some agencies paid fees to child finders locating adoptable children; and the influx of Western adoption tourism brought money that trickled down to hotels, restaurants, taxi-drivers and other service industries
~snip~
When Hawkins was finally called to Ethiopia to finalize her adoption, the BFAS staff there reassured her that her daughter had indeed been abandoned. But after the girl came to the United States she began acting out, behaving violently toward a set of baby dolls she had gotten for Christmas and systematically shattering glasses she found in the kitchen. A few months later, when she had learned some English, the daughter pointed to a picture of the orphanage that Hawkins had taped to her bedroom wall and told her, When I lived there, I missed my mom.
Hawkins responded, Honey, thats nice of you, but you didnt know me then. And then she kind of looks at me like shes afraid she was going to be in trouble, and you could see her really choosing her words with the little bit of English she had. And she said, You know, I have another mom.
~read the entire article @ http://www.thedailybeast.com/witw/articles/2013/04/24/kathryn-joyce-s-the-child-catchers-inside-the-shadowy-world-of-adoption-trafficking.
me b zola
(19,053 posts)Mopar151
(9,974 posts)IMHO, it's one of the major drivers of the anti-reproductive rights movement.
me b zola
(19,053 posts)My heart fell from my chest when I was watching a horrible disaster, the earthquake that leveled Haiti, when I was beginning to be pummeled with news reports of these rw American "orphanages" over there, which quickly became to look like warehouses awaiting Western adoption. Then I began to understand modern missionary. These so called followers of Christ have never bothered to lobby against economic oppression, yet they are busy lobbying for easier access to poor people's children. Human trafficking.
AnnieBW
(10,409 posts)She wasn't a Fundiegelical, at least as far as I could tell. They had already adopted one boy from Ethiopia and were going after another. I never said anything, but I had a strong suspicion that there was something like this behind it. My husband and I had looked into adopting overseas, and found out that there were a lot of baby-snatching rings, especially in Latin America. Besides, why not adopt an American kid? Oh, yeah, because the birth parent may change their mind and want the kid back after you've already signed the paperwork - and then you're screwed.