I haven’t written about adoption in a rather long time … Heck! I haven’t written about much of anything … but an article in today’s BBC sets wheels to spinning and fingers to keyboard.
Hundreds of parents in Nepal are struggling to come to terms with the fact that their children have been adopted by Western couples without their consent.
The article goes on to say that there are “about 20, mostly female, agents operating in Kathmandu, obtaining children for orphanages …”, and I don’t doubt the accuracy of that estimation.
Reactions from the gut happen … my gut, too. The photo looks fake, the girl in it a faded insert, and the copy states the woman had just one female child yet the caption reads: Sarita Bhujel says that she is devastated that her baby daughter appears to have ended up in Italy.
Horrible. Rotten. Dirty tricks played on illiterate parents in poor countries and hopeful adoptive parents in more affluent lands that must be addressed.
Yep.
At the root of the problem … ?
Adoptive parents pay thousands of dollars in fees and “donations” to orphanages and government officials who process their cases, creating what many observers describe as an incentive for widespread abuse.
Many observers say that, heh? I’m sure they do, and to a certain extent they’d be right to do so.
But …
The root of the problem has nothing to do with potential adoptive parents; it goes so much deeper than that, deeper than the roots of the Himalayas themselves.
The issue is poverty, poverty compounded by corruption, a global circumstance of real life for many of the world’s people.
What happens to children in poor countries? Well, let’s take a look at Nepal, shall we, since this is where this story is set?
– Statistics shows that of about 7 million children between 5-14 years old working in Nepal
– The number of bonded children is estimated as 33,000
– It is estimated that at least 1 million children in Nepal are working as child labourers in difficult circumstances, often as slaves in carpet factories, brick kilns, domestic service, agriculture, plantation, construction, transportation, stone quarry, mines and as migrant workers.
– Available data suggests that approximately 7,000 girls between 10 -18 are lured or abducted into prostitution each year. In many cases, parents or relatives sell young girls into sexual slavery.
– As an illustration, it is believed that 200,000 of the prostitutes in India are Nepalese. 20% are thought to be under 16.
– Half of 100,000 girl prostitutes between 10-14 in Bombay are from Nepal and are kept in brothels against their will.
– Poor, uneducated young women from Nepal’s rural regions are trafficked to India to work as prostitutes and for bonded labour. Nepalese citizens also are trafficked to Hong Kong, Thailand, and countries in the Middle East. Government officials suspect that organised crime groups and “marriage brokers” are the primary traffickers in Nepal and state that parents and other relatives of trafficking victims are sometimes complicit.
– A survey done in Kathmandu on 52 commercial sex workers by the Department of Research and Planning suggests that out of the total commercial sex workers surveyed, 13% were between 13-17 years.
– The NGO CWIN alleges that 2000 brothels exist in Nepal and a high percentage of the prostitutes working were children.
– Notorious in their own right for appalling working conditions, Nepalese carpet factories, where 50% of the workers are estimated to be children, are common sites of sexual exploitation by employers, as well as recruitment centres for Indian brothels.
It has longed seemed that outrage aimed at adoption is a red herring. Sure, shit happens and it should stop and those who profit in any way through corrupt practices should be strung up …
BUT …
wouldn’t it be more helpful to take on the bigger issues of real life?
No. I’m not suggesting adoption should not be subject to examination, controls, effective protocol or that it’s the be-all-end-all-warm-fuzzy-fix, just that it’s too damned easy to slap “Adoption (insert negative emotive word here)” into a headline and prompt a diverting knee jerk that shifts focus from the shit that is our world, no matter how far from our neighborhood where everyone’s heard stories about bad adoptive parents who sent their kid back to Russia.
Countries that conduct business under a layer of sleaze are crooked on all levels and those making money selling kids aren’t picky about who they sell them to … not even biological parents more often than most would like to think … so how about a global push to chop the balls off any man who has sex with a child? That seems a much better use of time and funds and energy, seeing as how the bottom would fall out of the kiddy sex industry pretty fuckin’ fast if there was a real chance they’d be separated from their testicles … not to mention all the extra duck food around.
Of course, some will argue that such drastic action would rob girls of a way to make a living, and in far too many circumstances that’s exactly what child prostitution is, so there would have to be provisions made, but perhaps a population lighter in the scrotum might find ways of being more creatively concerned with methods of living better suited to the welfare of all.
As this in The Independent suggests, the turn against adoption has not been the answer to the needs of children.
Only 60 babies were adopted in England last year – startling evidence of how Britain’s system for adopting children is grinding to a halt despite record numbers being taken into care.
Thousands of children are being held in limbo in care homes, secure units and temporary fostering because so few adoptions are being signed off by social workers. Their guidance has been to try to keep families together, which has also led to some children being left with negligent or abusive birth parents for too long.
Sadly, I can almost hear the standing ovation inspired in some by the news of adoption “grinding to a halt” and hope they read far enough to get to:
Three-quarters of the children in care, or about 48,000, were placed with a foster family. Twelve per cent, almost 8,000, were cared for in residential accommodation. A third of young adults who left care were not in education, employment or training last year.
The world is not a fair place. Bad things happen to good people, and many of those people are children.
Adoption is not a perfect solution, nor is it an evil foisted on the world. It is nowhere near the scale or condition of the sale of children into prostitution, yet one could be led to equate the two and with adoption far less a challenge to halt making that focus an easy rant.
And a BBC headline that shouts, “NEPAL COMES TO TERMS WITH FOREIGN ADOPTIONS TRAGEDY” misses the point that Nepal … for one … needs to come to terms with corruption and the sale of its children to pimps, that children in Britain languish for years in foster care and institutions and that a lot of men will pay money to have sex with kids.
By the way, writing about this again after all this time has brought to mind why I don’t often have adoption as a topic any more …
It just fucks with my head.
don’t stop putting the pen to your hand as you are passionate in your writing; more people need to see the forest through the trees.
Thanks, Linda, but I’m not feeling the passion so often these days.
Good to hear from you!!!
Thank you, Amy. It’s encouraging to be missed a bit …
Yea but you need to give me interesting things to read and times to argue about. with you writing less only one I have to argue with is myself, and that gets a bit old.
as for what you have written, I have no argument, it is that simple, the world is a nasty place for many reasons, but there are always to sides, and yes EVERYTHING that can be miss used or abused will be that. Be it adoption, pitbulls or politics.
There is no ONE solution, putting a halt on adoption wont stop child prostitution. Cardinal law might, but then again as you say, for some it is the only means to a meal however meager and for most humans if the choice is between living and dieing, they chose to survive. People think to short when it comes to fixing problems.
Do I have the answers? no, but that dosen’t mean that answers we do have are any good
And here I was hoping you’d fill in all the gaps, Bobby …
Damn!
This feels cozy and familiar 🙂
It does a bit, doesn’t it, Lisa?
I run a small children’s home in Nepal and recently rescued a two day old baby , The mother had tried to kill her after her birth, and when threatened by the house owner (he was going to tell the police if the baby died) decided to run away and dump the baby. I got there just in time and promised to take the baby if the mother would wait one day so I could take her legally. We brought them both to our home and the following day our lawyer came with witnesses and the mother signed the baby over to us. Now I know personally three people who would love to have this baby, my daughter, niece and a friend, but because of the laws here they are unable to . ANyway, when one could adopt here, no one was allowed to choose the baby and with the paperwork the newborn babes lingered in orphanages for up to four years. Our home is not one that allows adoptions and I thought about giving her to a place where she could be adopted, but with the new laws decided she would be better off with us – a small family style home with only 18 children. She is now three weeks old, well loved and sweet as can be, but my heart goes out to all those who wish to adopt and cannot. Beverly http://www.gharsitamutu.org
Horrific. Another blogger I follow wrote recently about statistics of child prostitution in India. http://eslmarriage.com/2011/10/05/learning-about-india/ She is a journalism student.
Worldwide we do terrible things to children. We are not a good species sometimes.