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Ten US Christians may face Haiti kidnapping charges

Parents 'reclaim' children in Haiti abduction-adoption row
Washington (AFP) Feb 2, 2010 - The 33 infants and children that an American Christian group tried to smuggle out of quake-hit Haiti are being reunited with their families, the US-based aid group now caring for them said Tuesday. The children were picked up last week by members of an Idaho-based Baptist group called New Life Children's Refuge who tried to take them across the border to the Dominican Republic where they planned to establish an orphanage. But some of the children are not orphans at all. "The parents now are coming to the village to reclaim their children," Heather Paul, the CEO of SOS Children's Villages USA, told NBC's "Today Show". "We already hear that many are saying that we have parents."

Police seized five men and five women with US passports, as well as two Haitians, as they tried late Friday to cross into the neighboring Dominican Republic with the children aged between two months and 14 years. The case came to light as authorities in the capital Port-au-Prince expressed concern that some Haitian children may have fallen prey to human traffickers or been misidentified as orphans. Paul said the children had been in poor condition when her group first received them but that they appeared to be on the mend. "They came quite traumatized, as you can imagine, for a number of reasons. First, the devastation of the earthquake and then the mystery or confusion of their family's disappearance." "They're getting better," she said.

Paul added that while in the care of the US Baptist group, the children, "weren't well dressed, they were dehydrated. They needed medical assistance." She said the case underscored the need for stricter rules and greater vigilance in dealing with children in Haiti. "I don't know all the facts, but if they were good intentions, they've certainly gone awry," she said. "I think this is proof positive for all those people around the world who would like to adopt Haitian children, that we must wait on the right registration." Laura Silsby, head of New Life Children's Refuge, has insisted the group's aims were entirely altruistic. "We came here literally to just help the children. Our intentions were good," she told AFP from police detention. "We wanted to help those who lost parents in the quake or were abandoned."

In Port-au-Prince, interim prosecutor Mazar Fortil said the Christians may face a charge of criminal conspiracy in Haiti as well as possible charges of kidnapping minors and child-trafficking. US consular officials visited the detained Americans and brought them food and insect repellent, but relatives back in the United States said they had hoped American officials might have done more. "I've seen them on TV and they look like they're in good spirits," Sean Lankford, whose wife and 18-year-old daughter were among those held, told NBC. He said he had not been able to speak to them since their arrest and was concerned that they had not received better treatment in detention.

"First off, you know, I think they were required to give them food and water. I mean, the basic essentials for life. And they were to help them to contact counselors on their behalf -- at least to give them the ability to do that. They were late in doing that," Lankford complained. "I appreciate everything they have done. I know that it took them a while to find them first off. I know also that there's a lot of needs that are happening in Haiti," the Meridian, Idaho resident said. But he added "as a dad and a husband, you know, I just want to make sure that my wife and my daughter have everything that they need, and my friends there have everything they need to stay healthy while they work through this, and while we try to help them work through this."
by Staff Writers
Port-Au-Prince (AFP) Feb 2, 2010
Ten US Christians held in Haiti faced possible child-trafficking charges Tuesday over an attempt to smuggle a group of children out of the quake-devastated nation.

In a case that has heightened concerns about the safety of child survivors of the quake, the 10 members of a Christian group -- who deny any evil intent -- face further questioning and a court appearance, officials said.

The controversy has overshadowed the ongoing massive international relief effort still struggling to feed, house and care for an estimated one million homeless Haitians.

Three weeks after the 7.0-magnitude quake killed 170,000 people, flattening the capital Port-au-Prince, many survivors are still gasping for food, water, shelter, security and medical help.

UN officials said nearly half a million people had fled Port-au-Prince for the countryside since the quake, doubling a previous estimate of 235,000.

The UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said 90 percent were staying with relatives, but the prices of basic commodities such as rice and sugar were rising and medical centers were short of supplies and equipment.

In Port-au-Prince, interim prosecutor Mazar Fortil said the Christians may face a charge of criminal conspiracy in Haiti as well as possible charges of kidnapping minors and child-trafficking.

The five men and five women with US passports, and two Haitians, were held late Friday when they tried to cross into the Dominican Republic in a bus with 33 children aged between two months and 14 years.

Culture and Communications Minister Marie Laurence Jocelyn Lassegue said a Haitian judge would decide whether to transfer the case to the United States.

A first appearance for the group scheduled Monday was postponed because a Creole language interpreter was not available.

Laura Silsby, who heads the Idaho-based group New Life Children's Refuge, insisted the group "came here literally to just help the children.

"Our intentions were good," she told AFP from police detention. "We wanted to help those who lost parents in the quake or were abandoned."

But as reports emerged that many of the children had parents, humanitarian groups worried it would confirm fears of human trafficking amid the chaos.

"For us it is important to clarify how those kids have been given to those people," Georg Willeit, a spokesman for SOS Children Village now looking after the children, told AFP.

US State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said Washington would be guided by Haitian officials.

"Once we know the facts we'll determine what the appropriate course is, but the judgement is really up to the Haitian government," he said.

Shortly after the quake, parents around the world waiting to adopt Haitian children pushed governments to speed up the process and Crowley said some 578 orphans had been brought to the United States under relaxed regulations.

On the ground in Haiti, the UN's humanitarian chief acknowledged the relief effort was still struggling, while there were also fresh fears of violence in the Caribbean country, which has been scarred by decades of political upheaval and bloodshed.

The United States resumed medical evacuations of critically injured quake victims to US hospitals after a row over funding had halted the flights.

Swiss Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey, on a swift weekend visit, and Haitian President Rene Preval discussed blocked assets worth 7.6 million Swiss francs (7.2 million dollars) belonging to ex-dictator Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier.

Suisse Romande television reported Calmy-Rey said she wanted the process of returning the cash, which have been held in Swiss accounts since his ouster in 1986, to be speeded up.

Meanwhile stars including Barbra Streisand, Celine Dion, Wyclef Jean, Pink, Kanye West and Brian Wilson lent their voices to a charity remake of "We Are The World" in aid of quake victims.

"It kind of hit me that I guess this is something way more important than I could have ever imagined," rapper Lil Wayne said.

In Britain, a charity single for Haiti had its first airplay, featuring the likes of Rod Stewart, Robbie Williams and Kylie Minogue singing a new version of REM's "Everybody Hurts."



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