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July 20, 2010
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Adoption News

 

West Africa: Children In Danger: Traditional Adoption Can Be "Living Hell"

DAKAR, 15 June (IRIN) - "I was four when I was left in the care of my uncle, who was childless. While I was small everything was fine, but when I turned nine my living hell began. I was no longer a child of the house, I was a slave of the house," said Souleymane. Now 16 and dressed in rags, the sad-looking boy whose right hand is missing three fingers breaks into tears on recalling those years. "One day when I was hungry I took a bit of food from the pot. My uncle's wife crushed my fingers with a hammer." Like more and more children across Africa today, Souleymane fell foul of an ancestral custom now going wrong - informal or "traditional" adoption or entrustment. Under the once socially useful system, children would be sent away from home to live with relatives or friends who took on responsibility for the child's education. Sent off from his remote village in Cameroon to his uncle's family in the northern town of Garoua, in the expectation he would receive an education from one of its many schools, Souleymane wound up being forced to do domestic work, and finally ran away. "My uncle's wife never lifted a finger. I cooked, cleaned, did all the house work," he said. "All I ever got in return were beatings."

So for the past four years he has lived on the street. "I won't ever go back," he said. In the old days, being asked to bring up someone else's child was an honour. A child might be sent away too as a "gift" to infertile relatives, or to be brought up by relatives if their mother died. "It would have been unimaginable for a family to allow children it had been entrusted with to be in rags and bare feet. This would have been a disgrace," said Youssouf Tata Cisse, a retired Malian researcher. But as poverty gnaws African society, children nowadays are being sent away because parents simply cannot afford to bring them up, said El Kane Mooh, West Africa advisor for Save the Children, Sweden, "They no longer have the means." Because of impoverishment and migration, traditional family ties are breaking down and stories like Souleymane's are becoming common, experts say. "In this region, there is more and more abject poverty. The African family, in the sense that we know it, doesn't exist any more. The fantasy of African solidarity doesn't exist any more," said Jean-Claude Legrand, a senior regional official with the UN children's agency UNICEF. "The family is changing, there is a new dynamic, and protecting children is no longer the priority." Many girls report not only exploitation but sexual assault by their new parents and families. Sylvie, now 28 and also living in Garoua, northern Cameroon, was "gifted" to an infertile big sister when she was two years old. "As soon as my sister went to work I would be at the mercy of the other wife and her children, who were bigger than me," she said. And when she was eight, her uncle's younger brother, "who was 18 and who often washed us," raped her. "I suffered a lot. I still have flashbacks," she said.

Amelie, who slipped away from an abusive family ten years ago and now lives in Paris, was beaten when she tried to speak out. "The day that I said that one of my uncles had touched me, he beat me and whipped me until I bled. It was true, but after that I kept silent. I could not talk about these things," she said. To end such violence, the World Bank, which funds programmes for street children across West Africa, recommended in a 2002 report the indirect sponsoring of orphans' education and that families burdened with extra children be helped by receiving food supplements and cash. The UN meanwhile is focused on providing centres in towns and cities that orphaned and abused children can go to, to get help. "We have to listen to the voices of urban street children so they can share their experiences and demand assistance", said Legrand at UNICEF. One such centre in the Beninese port city of Cotonou sees more than 500 children turn up spontaneously each year, and in Gabon the authorities have set up a hotline for children in trouble. Mooh at the children's rights NGO Save the Children says there must be more effort placed on trying to stop children becoming orphans in the first place, and on educating rural families to stop sending their children away for traditional adoption. "Parents in towns don't have the means to invest in a child, especially one which isn't their own, when they cannot even send their own children to school," he said.

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Did You Know?    
 
 
Most adoptive parents are two parent families
Most adoptive parents are two parent families aged 31 to 40. A growing number of parents are aged 41 to 49. Most parents attended or completed college.
Adoption assistance is available
Monthly or one-time only subsidy payments to help adoptive parents raise children with special needs. These payments were initially made possible by the enactment of the Adoption Assistance and Child Welfare Act of 1980 (P.L. 96-272) which provided Federa
Children can be adopted from other countries
Adopting children from all over the world has become something U.S. residents and citizens have been doing more and more when starting or expanding their families. Over 20,000 inter-country adoptions are taking place per year in addition to the more than
 


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Adoption Terms

 


Today's Terms

Adoption triad

Definition:
The three primary persons affected by the adoption: the birthparents, the child and the adoptive parent(s).

Legalization

Definition:
(Also called finalization) The legal act that establishes a family connection between the adopting person and the adopted person. Usually done in a courtroom setting, this act grants rights and responsibilities to the adoptive parent and child equal to th

Multiethnic Placement Act (MEPA)

Definition:
This is a federal law enacted in 1994, and amended in 1996, which prohibits an adoption agency from delaying or denying the placement of any child on the basis of race, color or national origin.

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Adoption Hot Topics

 


Topics Related to Adoption:

  • Adoption Agency
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Wyoming Adoption-Law Attorney

 
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  • Casper
  • Cheyenne
  • Cody
  • Douglas
  • Evanston
  • Gillette
  • Green River
  • Jackson
  • Lander
  • Laramie
  • Powell
  • Rawlins
  • Riverton
  • Rock Springs
  • Sheridan
 


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