Adoptions back in the spotlight

adoptions back in the spotlight In Romania, only 3,500 of the minors living in placement centers or foster care are eligible for adoption.

In Romania, only 3,500 of the minors living in placement centers or in the care of maternal assistants, therefore in the so called child protection system,  are eligible for adoption. The rest of them, out of a total number of 58,000 children, live separated from their families, in the same system, but they do have relatives. And yet, why do all those children end up in out-of-home state care? One possible explanation for that is provided by statistical data: 43% of the minors in the protection system end up there because of poverty. For those who have relatives, the authorities draw up personalized plans so that such children can be reintegrated in their extended families. However, reintegration occurs is much fewer cases than intended, while adoption - the solution for the other children  - is too long a process to stand real chances of success. The current Adoption Act, in force  since 2004, is based on the principle that everything should be done so that minors can be brought up by their relatives. Therefore, a child becomes adoptable only after their fourth degree relatives have been found and contacted, and if they refused to take care of that child.


Finding a child's' relatives can be a cumbersome and lengthy process, which is only one of the causes leading to the entire process being slowed down. There are cases when the adoption process as such fails to be accomplished, unfortunately, and the president of the National Authority for Child Protection Rights and Adoptions Gabriela Coman admits to that.


Gabriela Coman:  "Children coming from all sorts of communities and families can be easily placed in the protection system. About 5,000 children get into the system every year, a figure which in recent years has remained constant. The period of time these children spend in the system, be it in the care of a maternal assistant, in placement or foster care,  is unacceptably long, 6.5 years on average. If we look at statistics we see a big difference between the number of adoptable children and those who are actually adopted, between the number of the families with an adoptive family certificate and the number of children who are adopted. Moreover, most families want to adopt small children.  85 % of them are searching for a child younger than 6, in good health, but the number of such children in the system is much lower than the  potential  adoptive families would have liked."


The Adoption Act has been amended many times. It has been recently revised thanks to the counseling offered by civil society organizations and also by UNICEF's office in Romania, whose representative in Bucharest Sandie Blanchet has hailed all the legal changes that have occurred in the aforementioned law.


Sandie Blanchet: " We know that has been recognized by Romania, many times. The process today is too slow. I takes on average, and this is on average, 15 months for a child to be adopted and we foresee that with the revision, this delay will be reduced considerably. We also welcome that the revised law uses a new measure, some kind of a parental leave that will be given to one of the parents of the adoptive family, this leave will be for a maximum of one year, and the parent will also receive financial allowance of a maximum of one thousand seven hundred lei a month. Finally, I would like to highlight the fact that we should be very careful about targets and deadlines. The objective of putting, for example, some time frame around the process is not to make sure that all adoptions are conducted within that  time frame. It is not the ultimate ejective. The ultimate objective is to make sure that the child's situation improves, that the child finds a family that is a suitable family."


Under other amendments to the aforementioned law, the period of time during which relatives up to the fourth degree can be searched for and the child can be integrated  into the extended family has been shortened from one year to six months. Moreover, the two-year deadline for a child to be considered adoptable  no longer exits. This status of adoptable child, issued by a court of law, shall be effective up until the conclusion of the adoption procedure or until the child turns 14. After the age of 14, the child will have their say as regards their adoption. Also, the validity of the adoptive family license has been extended from one to two years. In fact, the trials and tribulations the prospective parents must go through during the adoption process are quite dramatic. Nicoleta Cristea-Brunel, a Romanian woman residing in France who has recently returned to Romania to adopt a child, told us about this painful process, which, for her, was a failure.


Nicoleta Cristea - Brunel:  "What is going on in Romania's child protection system is tantamount to a silent genocide. There are roughly 60,000 children in the system who cannot grow up in a family, for the simple reason that most of them never become eligible for adoption.  It is so frustrating, so painful. I, for one, being somebody who wanted to adopt a child, I simply couldn't go to all those and see the children, because I would've wanted to take them all home with me. But that was not possible, not only because I would have been incapable of bringing up 60,000 children, but because I was not granted the right to adopt at least one child. However, I went at all lengths to achieve that. I went through a process that, at some points, got virtually Kafkaesque, only to eventually be able to get the infamous adoption license. But that was all.  The entire process by which I tried to adopt a child in Romania only resulted in this piece of paper. And for a year I  kept it on my desk and I would jump every time my phone rang, thinking I would be invited to see a child. But the call never came. No child could be found for me, although in Romania, four children on average are abandoned in maternity wards every day."


Meanwhile, Nicoleta Cristea-Brunel had a baby girl, through IVF, and set up the "SOS Infertilitatea" Association, which promotes the rights of families who want to have children, whether through adoption or through assisted reproductive technology. Quite familiar with the scope of the Romanian bureaucracy, she is rather reserved as regards the revision of the Adoption Act. 


Nicoleta Cristea-Brunel:  "I find these amendments welcome, particularly those concerning the maternity leave for adoptive parents. As it usually happens, most children are over 2 years old when adopted, and parents didn't get a day of leave, believe it or not. You would take the child from the carer, and then you would have to let them with the baby-sitter or grandparents so that you could go to work. The adjustment period was not taken into account. The other changes are also welcome, but I first want to see them implemented. Many things look fine on paper. The text of the law also stipulates that court rulings on adoption cases are to be passed within ten days, but this never actually happens."


Recently passed by the Chamber of Deputies, the amendments to the Adoption Act are pending for promulgation by the President of Romania and publication in the Official Journal of Romania, in order to take effect.



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Publicat: 2016-04-06 13:38:00
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