Putin
approves bill banning US adoptions of Russian kids
Critics said it imperils the foster children, including those with special needs, who will now be barred from living a happy life in American families. They say the Russian authorities have made those kids victims of a political row between Moscow and Washington. Opposition to the law came from some cabinet ministers and other top Russian officials, among others.
Russian
President Vladimir Putin has signed a controversial bill that forbids
adoption of Russian foster children by American citizens. The law
comes into force on January 1, 2013.
RT,
28
December, 2012
.
The
legislation was earlier adopted by an overwhelming majority of
lawmakers in the Russian parliament. Putin voiced
his support for
the ban while the bill was still being debated by the lawmakers.
The
law, which is viewed by many as retaliation for a US law targeting
alleged Russian violators of human rights, will lead to the
revocation of a Russian-American agreement on the issues.
The
US State Department responded to the news from Moscow saying
it “deeply
regrets Russia’s passage of a law”,
labeling the ban “politically
motivated”.
“The
Russian government’s politically motivated decision will reduce
adoption possibilities for children who are now under institutional
care,” read
the statement by the spokesperson Patrick Ventrell. “We
regret that the Russian government has taken this step rather than
seek to implement the bilateral adoption agreement that entered into
force in November.”
Sponsors
of the
law justify
it with several cases of abuse of Russian children by their American
adoptive parents. They complained that the punishment for the
offences issued by the US justice system was disproportionately mild,
while Russian diplomats were prevented from giving enough input in
the prosecution of such cases.
Tracking
how Russian children are being treated in the US is all-but
impossible, Mirah Riben, a former director of the American Adoption
Congress told RT.
Riben
says that only in 19 cases, when children were tortured and died,
adoptive parents have been prosecuted for violent child treatment.
“How
many more? There's absolutely no way of knowing,”
she says. “We
certainly have no idea how many people are enduring abuses, surviving
abuses of all kinds.”
Riben
also remarked that in the US there is “no
system of follow up an adoption.” “Once an adoption is
finalized the child is considered as if born to that family,” she
explained.
Critics said it imperils the foster children, including those with special needs, who will now be barred from living a happy life in American families. They say the Russian authorities have made those kids victims of a political row between Moscow and Washington. Opposition to the law came from some cabinet ministers and other top Russian officials, among others.
A
separate decree signed by Putin on Friday calls on the Russian
Supreme Court to review the law and provide a clarification on how it
should be applied in practice. Critics said the law argued that it
contradicts Russian legislation and violates its international
commitments, making it unlawful.
The US
Magnitsky Act,
which triggered the adoption of the controversial law, places
sanctions on a number of Russian officials whom the American
legislators deem responsible for the death of Sergey Magnitsky in the
custody of Russian police. Magnitsky’s British employer alleges
that the lawyer was killed for exposing a big money embezzlement
scheme by corrupt law enforcers.
Russia
and the US have a record of quarreling over adoption. Back in 2010,
Russia imposed
a moratorium on
adoptions after a US mother sent
her 7-year-old adopted son to
Russia alone on a plane with a note saying she did not want him
anymore.
The
two countries were engaged in long and difficult negotiation over
adoptions, which culminated in a
bilateral agreement regulating
the issue in July this year. According to Putin’s spokesperson
Dmitry Peskov, the agreement will de facto be scrapped on January 1,
when the ban comes into force.
Children
who are currently slated to be adopted into American families may
instead be adopted in Russia, Children’s Ombudsman Pavel Astakhov
told Interfax.
“There are 52 such children. I believe they must be adopted in Russia, with the regional governors taking personal responsibility for them,” he said.
“There are 52 such children. I believe they must be adopted in Russia, with the regional governors taking personal responsibility for them,” he said.
The
government intends to compensate the loss of opportunity for Russian
children to be adopted into American families by encouraging domestic
adoptions, Putin told parliamentarians on Thursday. Little detail on
how that might be done has been made public so far. One MP suggested
boosting aid to foster families to be on par to what Russia spends on
children living in orphanages.
Other
possible measures outlined in the Friday decree include facilitating
adoption procedures and raising benefits for foster children and
salaries for orphanage workers.
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