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Aid agency reunites Haiti kids with parents

  • Story Highlights
  • Agency says 47 Haiti children kept in inhumane conditions at adoption center
  • Official says many were stunted from malnutrition and had skin diseases
  • Parents had given kids away after being promised they'd receive good care
  • Parents won judgment ordering kids' release after learning of poor conditions
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GENEVA, Switzerland (Reuters) -- Forty-seven children in Haiti have been reunited with their parents after being kept in inhumane conditions at an adoption center for up to two years, an international aid agency said Friday.

Now ages 2 to 7 years, the children were "given away" by their parents in return for promises that they would receive good care and the families would get financial assistance to set up small businesses and meet their other children's needs, the International Organization for Migration said.

The children were kept at the center in the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince, ostensibly awaiting international adoption, for a period ranging from six months to two years.

Many were stunted from malnutrition and had skin diseases due to poor care, International Organization for Migration spokeswoman Jemini Pandya said.

After learning of the conditions the children were kept in, and realizing they had been misled, the parents denounced the center's owner and won a judgment ordering their release this week.

"IOM and the Pan American Development Foundation have just returned 47 trafficked children back to their homes and their parents in the town of Jeremie in Haiti's Grande Anse region," Pandya told a news briefing in Geneva.

The children were considered "trafficked" as they had been put in an exploitative situation, she said.

At least another 40 children from a different town remained at the center as authorities had yet to start proceedings to have them returned home, the spokeswoman said.

A lack of resources in Haiti, the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, has prevented social welfare authorities from investigating all international adoption centers, she said.

The Geneva-headquartered organization is providing the released children with medical and psychological care, paying their school fees for a year, and giving the parents cash and training to help them care for their large families. E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

Copyright 2007 Reuters. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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