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Eldritch
04-11-2010, 02:14 PM
The boy was only 7, but he walked off the plane that arrived in Moscow from Washington all alone, carrying a knapsack with magic markers and candy, along with a single typewritten note. It was from a woman in Tennessee who had adopted him in Russia last year, became overwhelmed by what she described as his emotional problems and now wanted nothing more to do with him. Take him back, the note said.

“After giving my best to this child, I am sorry to say that for the safety of my family, friends and myself, I no longer wish to parent this child,” she wrote.

The boy’s plight prompted the Russian government to say on Friday that it would suspend all adoptions of Russian children by Americans until safeguards could be put in place. Russia was the third leading source of adoptive children in the United States in 2009, with 1,586, following China, with 3,001, and Ethiopia, with 2,277, according to State Department figures.

The boy, Artyom, who was named Justin by his adoptive American mother, landed in Moscow on Thursday, and Russian officials gained custody over him after he presented them with the note. His mother, Torry Ann Hansen, a registered nurse from Shelbyville, Tenn., wrote in the note that the boy “is violent and has severe psychopathic issues.” She added that she “was lied to and misled by the Russian orphanage workers” about his troubles.

Local officials in Tennessee said they did not believe that Ms. Hansen or his adoptive grandmother, Nancy Hansen, had records of child abuse or neglect, but would now examine their conduct in Artyom’s case.

As the boy’s return to Russia grew into an international incident, the Hansen family went into seclusion, leaving its house in Shelbyville and refusing to answer phone calls. Before that, Nancy Hansen told The Associated Press that the boy had been violent and abusive toward his mother in the United States.

“He drew a picture of our house burning down, and he’ll tell anybody that he’s going to burn our house down with us in it,” she said. “It got to be where you feared for your safety. It was terrible.”

Nancy Hansen said she accompanied the boy on a flight to Washington, where she then put him on a direct flight to Moscow on Wednesday, according to Russian and American officials here. She had found a guide over the Internet who for $200 agreed to pick up the child at the airport in Moscow and to drop him off at the Education Ministry.

She said they had not abandoned the child, having arranged for the airline to supervise him on the flight and for him to be picked up at the airport.

Foreign adoptions have long touched a sensitive nerve here. Russians often find it hard to accept that their country, which they consider a resurgent world power, cannot take care of its own children and has to give them up to outsiders.

On Friday, Russian state television broadcast a video in which the federal children’s ombudsman, Pavel Astakhov, talked to Artyom, whose face was at times blurred to conceal his identity. A traditional Russian nesting doll had been placed squarely in the middle of the table where they were sitting.

Mr. Astakhov has a reputation for outspokenness, and he once led a group, “For Putin,” that fervently supported Vladimir V. Putin, the current prime minister and former president.

Speaking to Artyom in both Russian and English, Mr. Astakhov asked him about his adoptive mother. Artyom said she was “bad.”

“Did she hit you?” Mr. Astakhov asked.

Artyom said no, but he then motioned to show that she had pulled his hair.

“Did you cry?” Mr. Astakhov asked.

“Yes,” Artyom said.

“You are a man, you shouldn’t cry,” Mr. Astakhov said.

Government doctors said that Artyom had not been physically abused. But Mr. Astakhov later told reporters that Artyom “needs to be rehabilitated. He needs good care now.”

Artyom was adopted from an orphanage in Russia’s Far East, near Vladivostok, where he lived after his mother, an alcoholic, lost her parental rights, officials said. Mr. Astakhov said Artyom would now be sent to an orphanage or a similar institution in Russia.

More than 50,000 Russian children have been adopted by United States citizens since 1991, according to statistics from the United States Embassy. The adoption rate peaked at 6,000 in 2003, and it then declined as screening procedures and other legal hurdles mounted.

Fourteen Russian children adopted by Americans have died of abuse since 1996, Russian officials said last year, and the cases have set off strong reactions here.

Full story here. (http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/10/world/europe/10russia.html?ref=world)

The Lawspeaker
04-17-2010, 12:58 PM
I think that children should always be put up for adoption in their own immediate family and if there are no volunteers in their own homecountry (in general). If there are no parents then perhaps it would be an idea to put it up for world-wide adoption.

But in general I think that Russian children belong in Russia, Dutch (and Flemish) children in the Netherlands/Flanders.