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Government Plans Fresh Changes In Armenian Child Adoption Rules

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  • Government Plans Fresh Changes In Armenian Child Adoption Rules

    GOVERNMENT PLANS FRESH CHANGES IN ARMENIAN CHILD ADOPTION RULES
    Emil Danielyan

    Armenialiberty.org
    Sept 19 2011

    The Armenian government is planning to make fresh and potentially
    far-reaching changes in its rules and procedures for international
    adoptions of children from Armenia following an RFE/RL report
    suggesting that they may still be riddled with corruption.

    Relevant proposals drawn up by Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian's office
    aim to increase the transparency of the process and reduce the role
    of obscure local middlemen working for Western adoption agencies.

    They are also meant to make it easier for Armenian families to adopt
    or bring up orphans.

    An April 2011 report by RFE/RL's Armenian service (Azatutyun.am)
    said that U.S. adoption agencies seem to continue to make thousands
    of dollars in informal payments to Armenian officials dealing with
    foreign adoptions. In particular, it cited a sample contract signed
    by one such agency, Hopscotch Adoptions, with Americans wishing to
    adopt Armenian and Georgian children.

    The contract, offered to a potential client in the United States
    in 2007, explained that almost $5,000 of more than $30,000 charged
    by Hopscotch for every adoption would be spent on "gifts to foreign
    service providers and government functionaries performing ministerial
    tasks as an offer of thanks for prompt service." It claimed that such
    gifts are "customary" in Armenia and Georgia and do not violate U.S.

    law.

    "Gifts and gratuities" were also a separate spending category in
    a sample agreement that was offered by another U.S. agency, Adopt
    Abroad, at least until last April.

    Officials at the Armenian Ministry of Justice as well as
    anti-corruption campaigners in Yerevan agreed at the time that such
    payments amount to bribes and are therefore illegal in Armenia.

    Government sources say Prime Minister Sarkisian took the report very
    seriously, instructing his senior staff to initiate a major revision
    of existing adoption rules. They were quick to come up with relevant
    proposals. Those were submitted in June, along with copies of the
    Hopscotch contract obtained by RFE/RL, to an inter-agency government
    commission on adoptions headed by Justice Minister Hrayr Tovmasian.

    "The root cause of this problem is a lack of transparency, and we must
    do something about it," one senior government official told RFE/RL's
    Armenian service (Azatutyun.am).

    Under the existing rules, the Armenian Ministry of Labor and Social
    Issues draws up and keeps a national registry of children available for
    domestic and foreign adoption. The list is supposed to be accessible
    to prospective adoptive parents.

    U.S. -- A screenshot of the website of the Hopscotch Adoptions agency..

    But according to a department on social affairs at the prime minister's
    office, this has not been the case in reality as even government
    bodies have trouble accessing information about all children listed
    on the registry, officially called Manuk (Child) Database.

    In a written statement to the government, the Ministry of Labor said
    that the database comprised a total of 171 children (135 them kept
    in orphanages) as of May 1, 2011. However, the head of a ministry
    division handling adoptions, Lala Ghazarian, spoke of only about 90
    such orphans when she was interviewed by RFE/RL's Armenian service
    in April.

    In its written proposals discussed by Tovmasian's commission this
    summer, the government department said that "in some cases" children's
    inclusion in the database has been a mere formality that legalized
    pre-arranged adoptions fraught with "corruption risks." It said this
    is especially true for healthy babies, the most in-demand category
    of orphans.

    The department suggested that the entire database be posted on the
    ministry website and made available to anyone considering an adoption
    from Armenia. Tovmasian is said to have personally backed the idea,
    which also envisages the creation of a separate electronic database
    of adoption applicants. The latter would thus be put in direct online
    contact with relevant Armenian authorities in the initial stages of
    the adoption process.

    Officials say this would narrow down the scope of shady activities
    of Armenian "facilitators" receiving lump sums from U.S. and other
    foreign agencies. Hopscotch paid them $10,500 per child at least
    until 2007, while Adopt Abroad currently charges a "facilitators fee"
    of as much as $19,000. Whether a part of this money is also spent on
    "gifts" is anybody's guess.

    None of the Yerevan-based adoption brokers is known to be registered
    with tax authorities.

    Another major proposal from Prime Minister Sarkisian's staff would
    increase from three to six months the minimum period of time, after
    an orphan's inclusion on the database, during which he or she cannot
    be eligible for international adoption. This requirement, meant to
    facilitate domestic adoptions, appears to have been violated in at
    least two cases in 2007.

    In one such example, an American couple living near Washington, DC
    adopted a little Armenian girl through Hopscotch in May 2008. Sonia
    Vigilante, the adoptive mother, revealed on her blog that the girl
    was less than one month old when she and her husband were first shown
    her pictures and offered to adopt her in October 2007.

    Vigilante reacted to the RFE/RL report with a litany of abusive e-mails
    sent to Ara Manoogian, an Armenian-American activist and blogger who
    privately interviewed her and several other U.S. adoptive parents and
    shared their experiences in Armenia with an RFE/RL correspondent. Using
    a fictitious identity, Manoogian posed as a childless man from Texas
    interested in adopting an Armenian child.

    "The girl is mine mine, mine!!!" Vigilante wrote on May 31. "I win,
    Armenia loses. Hahahahahahahaha!!!" "I don't give a shit what the
    Armenian crooks think of me anymore," she said in a subsequent note.

    Sarkisian aides want to curb foreign adoptions also by reinvigorating
    a 2004 government program that pays local families to host and
    raise the orphans until they come of age. The program has had only a
    limited success, with only 24 children currently placed with foster
    care providers.

    The government launched the child fostering scheme as part of a
    broader toughening of adoption rules that followed another, June 2003
    RFE/RL report that likewise exposed possible corrupt practices. The
    number of annual foreign adoptions has not changed significantly
    since then. According to the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs,
    61 Armenian children were adopted by foreigners in 2010.

    The ministry informed Justice Minister Tovmasian's commission in July
    that it has started drafting amendments to Armenia's adoption-related
    laws and regulations. Those amendments have not been submitted to
    the commission yet.

    Whether ministry officials, who have long played a key role in the
    controversial adoptions, will propose the kind of radical changes
    that are sought by Sarkisian aides remains to be seen.

    http://www.azatutyun.am/content/article/24333430.html



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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