In order to protect the rights and interests of certain Nepali children and their families, and of U.S. prospective adoptive parents, the Department of State and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) have jointly decided to suspend adjudication of new adoption petitions and related visa issuance for children who are described as having been abandoned in Nepal.Took 'em long enough. Just about every other country has stopped international adoptions from Nepal, and the State Department has been issuing warnings for a while, but they have just now stopped adoptions from Nepal.
The Department of State’s recent interactions with the Government of Nepal and its efforts to review and investigate numerous abandonment cases, including field visits to orphanages and police departments, have demonstrated that documents presented to describe and “prove” the abandonment of children in Nepal are unreliable. Civil documents, such as the children’s birth certificates often include data that has been changed or fabricated. Investigations of children reported to be found abandoned are routinely hindered by the unavailability of officials named in reports of abandonment. Police and orphanage officials often refuse to cooperate with consular officers’ efforts to confirm information by comparing it with official police and orphanage records. In one case, the birth parents were actively searching for a child who had been matched with an American family for adoption. Because the Department of State has concluded that the documentation presented for children reported abandoned in Nepal is unreliable and the general situation of non-cooperation with and even active hindrance of investigations, the U.S. Government can no longer reasonably determine whether a child documented as abandoned qualifies as an orphan. Without reliable documentation, it is not possible for the United States Government to process an orphan petition to completion
Adoption Initiative Conference 2022
2 years ago
3 comments:
I was told about Nepal corruption when we first started our adoption in 2005; our agency (who offered adoption from there) warned us against it. You are right, it is about time!
And they're not alone.
If you want to understand the U.S. suspension, read:
Nepal Children's Organization (Bal Mandir) -- Victims of Balmandir
http://poundpuplegacy.org/node/43654
and
Trade of Children (Voice of Children) at PEAR Nepal
http://pearadoptinfo-nepal.blogspot.com/2010/06/trade-of-children-voice-of-children.html
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