Labor Law Talk  
Complete Labor Law Poster for $24.95
from www.LaborLawCenter.com, includes
State, Federal, & OSHA posting requirements

Go Back   Labor Law Talk > Family Law Forum > Paternity Law

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 10-04-2004, 06:43 AM
LilMtnCbn LilMtnCbn is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2004
Posts: 1,214
Default Romania cracks down on trade of orphan babies to the West

http://news.scotsman.com/internation...?id=1155852004

Romania cracks down on trade of orphan babies to the West

ALLAN HALL


ROMANIAN authorities have confirmed that scores of people, including at least
three British couples, are being investigated for allegedly using a legal
loophole to buy babies from Romania.

Romania banned adoptions abroad in 2001 following pressure from the European
Union.

In an effort to enforce the ban, the government recently authorised tough
penalties of up to seven years in jail for families who accept money or other
goods in exchange for giving up a child.

But Romanian prime minister Adrian Nastase has now ordered a special
investigation after it was revealed that large sums of money were still
changing hands to help those wanting to bypass the ban to find suitable
children and use legal loopholes to smuggle them abroad.

Mr Nastase said the loophole involved foreign men assuming paternity for
Romanian children that gave them the right to take a child out of the country
in defiance of the ban.

Police are investigating dozens of cases involving people from countries such
as Turkey, Italy, Hungary, Iran, Germany, France, Spain, Greece and the UK, but
believe the real number could be in the hundreds.

A spokesman for the organised crime department said: "We cannot give concrete
details while investigations are ongoing, but we can confirm that we are now
fighting such a modus operandum.

"Every day we get new information. We are looking at three cases involving UK
families, but we cannot reveal any names or details.

"We are looking at cases where the man claimed to be the father of a child
where no father was named on the birth certificate. In each case these children
are now living abroad."

The spokesman said the cases were suspicious because they involved foreign
citizens who declared paternity of babies a long time after their birth.

He also warned that the problem might be worse, since those allegedly fixing
the deals might also have been arranging babies to order, setting up deals with
pregnant women to hand over a child as soon as it was born, then putting the
name of the foreign father on the birth certificate straight away.

"We have been investigating these cases since June this year and maternity
wards and city halls have been carefully checked," he said, adding that checks
were being made to see if DNA tests could be made to confirm the paternity
claims.

Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu banned contraception and abortion under his
regime. When it fell in 1989 almost 100,000 abandoned children were left in
neglected homes and institutions. Many couples from the West offered to adopt
children after seeing television pictures.

Today, almost 40,000 children remain in the state system as poverty ensures a
ready supply of new babies.

In response to the latest allegations and revelations that even the government
has allowed almost 200 babies to be classified as "exceptions" to the foreign
adoptions ban, the government has authorised a strengthening of it, closing the
legal loopholes and removing another obstacle to EU membership in 2007.

It will effectively make foreign adoptions of Romanian babies almost impossible
from January of next year, as Romanian children can only be adopted by a family
living abroad if one of the adoptive parents is the grandmother or grandfather
of the child.


-------------------------
A good friend will come and bail you out of jail . . . but, a true friend will
be sitting next to you saying, "Damn . . . that was fun!"
-----Unknown
Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
West Virginia Labor Law Posters laborlaw West Virginia Labor Laws 0 04-30-2005 12:42 AM
Dowagiac celebrates ties to orphan train history LilMtnCbn Washington Family Law 0 09-01-2004 08:54 AM
Tragedy of babies left to die LilMtnCbn Adoption Law 0 07-19-2004 09:15 AM
EC Issues Ultimatum to Romania: Stop Child Exports LilMtnCbn Adoption Law 1 02-05-2004 06:59 PM
=?utf-8?B?U2VjcmV0IHNoYW1lIG9mIOKAmGhpZGRlbuKAmSBiYWJpZXM=?= LilMtnCbn Adoption Law 0 01-25-2004 07:45 AM


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 09:56 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
© LaborLawTalk.Com 2008. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy | Disclaimer and Conditions of Use

The LaborLawTalk.com forum is intended for informational use only and should not be relied upon and is not a substitute for legal advice. The information contained on LaborLawTalk.com are opinions and suggestions of members and is not a representation of the opinions of LaborLawTalk.com. LaborLawTalk.com does not warrant or vouch for the accuracy, completeness or usefulness of any postings or the qualifications of any person responding. Please consult a legal expert or seek the services of an attorney in your area for more accuracy on your specific situation. Please note that some of our forums also serve as mirrors to Usenet newsgroups. Many posts you see on our forums are made by newsgroup users who may not be members of LaborLawTalk.com

Topics pertain mainly to the following States:
Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware District Of Columbia Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada North Carolina North Dakota New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming