Ethiopian News & Opinion Journal
  • HOME
  • CONTACT
  • FORUM
  • ADVERTISE
  • ALBUM
  • ARCHIVE
  • LOGIN
  • RSS

U.S. adoption agencies exploit Ethiopian children – documentary

September 14th, 2009 | Categories: Featured

This transcript is a record of the Radio National broadcast. – ABC.net

TONY EASTLEY: In Australia, international adoptions are handled by the Government and are highly regulated, but that’s not the case elsewhere in the world.

In the United States international adoptions are a big business, where a large number of private international adoption agencies are paid on average $30,000 a time to find a child for hopeful parents.

The number of Americans adopting Ethiopian children has quadrupled, especially since American celebrities adopted African children.

A Foreign Correspondent team has been investigating American adoption agencies operating in Ethiopia and has uncovered some alarming practices.

Africa correspondent Andrew Geoghegan reports.

ANDREW GEOGHEGAN: Famine, disease and war have orphaned around five million Ethiopian children. It’s not surprising then that the business of international adoptions is thriving here and Americans in particular are queuing up to adopt a child.

EXCERPT FROM DVD: This is Yabets. He’s five years old and both of his parents died; it says they died of tuberculosis. Can you smile? Oh, nice smile.

ANDREW GEOGHEGAN: This is the sales pitch from an American agency Christian World Adoption. In a remote village in Ethiopia’s south the agency has compiled a DVD catalogue of children for its clients in the United States.

EXCERPT FROM DVD: Father has died. I’m not certain what he died of and this is the mother. Hoping for a family who can provide for them, they’re just really desperate for people to take care of their children.

ANDREW GEOGHEGAN: Incredibly though, many of the children being advertised are not orphans at all. American Lisa Boe was told by Christian World Adoption that the little boy she’d adopted was an orphan, but she soon had doubts.

LISA BOE: There was a picture of the people that had found him, and there’s a man and a woman in the picture. I point to the woman and he calls her mamma. I would never, never have brought home a child that has a mum. Never.

ANDREW GEOGHEGAN: At least 70 adoption agencies have set up business in Ethiopia. Almost half are unregistered, but there’s scant regulation anyway and fraud and deception are rife. Some agencies actively recruit children in a process known as harvesting.

EXCERPT FROM DVD: If you want your child to be adopted by a family in America, you may stay. If you do not want your child to go to America, you should take your child away.

ANDREW GEOGHEGAN: Parents give up their children in the belief they’ll have better lives overseas. But many have little understanding of the process or that that they may never see their children again.

EYOB KOLCHA: It was considered good for the children in the community and the people came.

ANDREW GEOGHEGAN: Eyob Kolcha worked for Christian World Adoption before quitting in December 2007.

EYOB KOLCHA: There was no information before that time, there was no information after that.

ANDREW GEOGHEGAN: Did their parents realise that they were now legally someone else’s children?

EYOB KOLCHA: They didn’t understand that. I don’t think most people, most parents understand even elsewhere in Ethiopia right now.

MUNERA AHMED (translated): I have no words to express my feelings and my anguish about what happened to my children and what I did.

ANDREW GEOGHEGAN: After her husband left, Munera Ahmed gave up two sons – one 12 months old and the other five through another adoption agency.

She has had no word about her children since she handed them over; that’s despite guarantees that she’d be kept informed. The agency has now closed.

MUNERA AHMED (translated): As a mother not to be able to know my kids’ situation hurts me so much, I have no words, no words to express my emotions (crying).

ANDREW GEOGHEGAN: About 30 Ethiopian children are leaving the country every week, bound for a new home, new parents and an uncertain future.

This is Andrew Geoghegan in Addis Ababa for AM.

TONY EASTLEY: And you can watch the full story tonight on Foreign Correspondent at 8pm.


Email This Post Email This Post | Add a comment Write a Comment





Leave a Comment

To write your comment in Amharic or download Amharic fonts click here. አስተያየትዎን በአማርኛ ለመጻፍ እዚህ ይጫኑ:: ጽፈው ከጨረሱ በኋላ የጻፉትን ኮፒ አድርገው ወደዚህ ተመልሰው አስተያየት መስጫ ቦክስ ውስጥ ፔስት ያድርጉ:: ወይም ከዚህ በታች ያለውን በመጫን መልእክትዎትን በድምጽ መቅዳት ይችላሉ::



Archive




Ethiopian News & Opinion Journal





Recent Posts
  • Ethiopian wins Oklahoma State University pageant
  • Politicizing of U.S. aid to Ethiopia ahead of election
  • A U.S. citizen survives 107 days in Ethiopian prison
  • Ethiopians in Israel celebrate Sigd
  • Former Commercial Bank of Ethiopia manager gets 9 years
  • A record 670,000 foreign students attend schools in the U.S.
  • The Meaning of Hebret
  • ከአቶ ምትኩ ይመር ለቀረበ ጽሁፍ የተሰጠ ምላሽ
  • UK gives $316 million to Ethiopia’s tribal junta
  • Africa: double trouble
  • Mix of traditional food and entertainment at DC’s Little Ethiopia
  • Why is the U.S. giving special treatment to Ethiopia’s dictatorship?
  • Somalia is outpacing Ethiopia in mobile phone access
  • Ethiopians in Israel resist interracial marriage – survey
  • Angola amb. to Ethiopia misses the point on “illegal” immigration
  • U.S. investigates claims its aid being used for politics in Ethiopia
  • የኢትዮጵያ ሕዝብ ለሰጠን ኃላፊነት ብቁ ሆነን አልተገኘንም – ዶ/ር ያዕቆብ ኃ/ማርያም
  • The “Untold Story” of the Starvation in Ethiopia
  • Teddy Afro in Dubai – video
  • Ethiopia elections: Last ditch attempt at blowing dust
  • Ethiopia: Addis Ababa Police Headquarters robbed
  • Institutionalized torture of Hassan Ahmed Makhtal in Ethiopia
  • Egyptian police gun down an Ethiopian man
  • የግል ሚዲያ የዴሞክራሲ ዋስትና እንጂ ጠላት አይደለም
  • Ethiopia: ONLF forces attack multiple Woyanne targets
  • HRW honors Ethiopian human rights activist Daniel Bekele
  • Ethiopian-American vote delivers in Virginia 09 elections
  • Ethiopia’s Haile Gebrselassie returns to Dubai
  • Ethiopian lawyer Daniel Bekele to speak at HRW event in Toronto
  • Ethiopians in Israel struggle to succeed – video
  • North Carolina: Senseless murder of Ethiopian girl
  • Liya Kebede on challenges facing mothers in Ethiopia
  • 2 Ethiopian men charged with fraud in Atlanta
  • North Carolina man shot Ethiopian girlfriend
  • Ethiopians in the Diaspora overestimate U.S. leverage in Ethiopia
  • American man suing FBI over wrongful detention in Ethiopia
  • 40 tonnes of gold discovered in Ethiopia
  • Health ministers from around the world meet in Ethiopia
  • Sentencing of Ethiopian man in Maryland postponed
  • J. Peter Pham: Ethiopian warlord’s “Intellectual for Hire”
  • The British criminal legacies still plague Africa
  • Ethiopian scientist receives award
  • ONLF denies defection of a high-level official
  • Ethiopia 2010 elections will not be free and fair – Negasso Gidada
  • Japan provides $18 million for clean water in Tigray
  • Ethiopia loses millions from livestock smuggling
  • Egypt warns any attempt to irrigate Nile is an act of war
  • New mission of U.S. forces in Africa
  • Ethiopia opposition coalition presents joint election platform
  • Several Ethiopians arrested in Washington DC taxi bribery scandal


©2009 Ethiopian Review
Publisher & Editor-in-Chief: Elias Kifle
Powered by WordPress