Forum Haiti : Des Idées et des Débats sur l'Avenir d'Haiti


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Forum Haiti : Des Idées et des Débats sur l'Avenir d'Haiti
Forum Haiti : Des Idées et des Débats sur l'Avenir d'Haiti
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Exploitation éhontée de nos enfants.

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Exploitation éhontée de nos enfants. Empty Exploitation éhontée de nos enfants.

Message  Sasaye Dim 12 Aoû 2007 - 17:09

Kisa pou nou fè ak Sankoutya sayo?

Yo pa kontante yo fè ti ayisyen tounen esklav ann Ayiti.
Yap vann yo bay blan tou.

Se pou gouvenman an fè jije moun sa yo mem jan ak kidnapè e fè yo peye timoun yo dedomajman anvan yo fèmen yo lan prizon pou rès vi yo.

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PrintSource: International Organization for Migration (IOM)

Date: 10 Aug 2007

Save Trafficked children returned home

Haiti - A group of 47 child victims of trafficking have been returned by IOM and the Pan American Development Foundation (PADF) to their homes in the impoverished district of Grand Anse in south-west Haiti, where IOM will provide follow-on care and assistance.

Aged between two and seven years of age, the children had been taken from their home town of Jeremie to Haiti's capital, Port-au-Prince where they were kept at a rogue centre awaiting international adoption for a period ranging from six months to two years.

The children, who all come from major trafficking source communities, were ‘given away' by their parents in return for promises made by traffickers working for the centre to assist them financially to set up small businesses, and to meet the needs of children who'd been taken away and those remaining behind.

After learning that they had been misled by the traffickers and of the inhumane conditions in which their children were being kept at the centre, parents approached a local NGO, Initiative Départementale contre la Traite et le Traffic des Enfants (IDETTE) to denounce the owner of the centre and to ask for the return of their children. With the help of other NGOs, the parents filed a complaint against the owner of the centre in 2006 and campaigned for the return of their children.

The Haitian government through the Institute for Social Well-Being and Research (IBERS) and the Brigade of the Protection of Minors, the PADF, the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), the Collectif contre la Traite et le Trafic de Personnes, local NGOs and IOM all collaborated to enable the rescue and return of these children.

According to IBERS, whose functions include the approval of adoptions, there are many other bogus centres involved in the trafficking of children for international adoptions. However, a lack of resources means the government agency is currently unable to investigate all centres and to close down all those involved in child trafficking.

A UNICEF/Terre des Hommes study in 2005 revealed that the number of crèches involved in inter-country adoptions had seen a spectacular increase in recent years with fees reaching USD 10,000, mostly to pay lawyers processing the adoptions.

In addition to sheltering the children post-rescue and in helping to return them back home, IOM will provide them with medical and psychological assistance. The educational fees of school-aged children will also be paid for one year while parents will be given micro-grants and training to set up small businesses to ease financial worries during the initial period of return.

One of the most impoverished regions of Haiti, many villages and communities in Grande Anse are difficult to access and have no schools or hospitals. Many families here have between six to eight children with parents often unable to meet basic needs such as food, education and healthcare.

Since 2005, IOM has assisted with the return and reintegration of 121 child victims of trafficking in Haiti with funding from the US State Department's Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration (PRM). In addition to providing medical and psycho-social care, IOM also carries out family tracing, evaluation and reunification, educational/vocational support in addition to giving micro-enterprise grants to parents/caretakers to prevent re-trafficking. Where family reunification is not possible, children are placed in shelters.

For more information, please contact: Geslet Bordes, IOM Port au Prince, Tel: +509 244 1218; 490 0505, E-mail: gbordes@iom.int


Copyright © IOM. All rights reserved.
Sasaye
Sasaye
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Date d'inscription : 02/03/2007

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Exploitation éhontée de nos enfants. Empty Re: Exploitation éhontée de nos enfants.

Message  Rodlam Sans Malice Dim 12 Aoû 2007 - 21:12

It is a noble task to write about children who are being sold ,but it is imperative that the governments of these poor countries establishe family planning programs .How many times do we have to read or hear about the selling of children in haiti and in other poor countries of the world?These are crimes against humanity in the same scale as slavery.

The peoiple in the so called "civilised countries "are the buyers of these children.Why their government tolerates this inhumane practice. The irony and cruelty of theses acts are the indifferences of the polticians toward these children.

Tonight I watched on 60 minutes with indignation the sufferings of the people in the Dafur region of the Sudan.Why do the african countries have to wait for the white men to save these africans whp are being slaughtered by the arabs?Did white men wait for Africans to save the jews from the Nazis?Viewing the kids in the refugee camp I wonder if Nelson Mandela has seen these pictures .Do we have to wait for the apporval of the united nations to save our brothers and sisters?Again it is the United States that are providing food in the refugee camp.The doctor who is taking care of the sicks is a white man.Where are the african doctors?

As the song says :'What the world needs now is love ."We do not love our own enough.How can we expect others to love us.
Rodlam Sans Malice
Rodlam Sans Malice
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Date d'inscription : 21/08/2006

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