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Thursday, July 8, 2010

Darkness behind child adoption

I have been thinking I may donate to poor children in a poor country one day when I have more money, but this news article Families in the dark as adoption chief quits has shocked me. How much trust can we have in our government? Can we trust charity organizations? Are there any corruption free governments?

In case this article may be archived by ABC in the future, it is quoted below.

Families in the dark as adoption chief quits

By Cassie White for News Online's Investigative Unit

Updated 2 hours 28 minutes ago

3.46pm Thursday 08 July 2010

African children

Adoptive familes condemned what they say is the Government's "secrecy" surrounding the real reason he stood aside. (Flickr: Mk B)

The man who ran Australia's adoption program with Ethiopia for 20 years has stood down amidst ongoing serious allegations of corruption.

Earlier in the year ABC News Online revealed allegations by adoptive parents about the program, which until the end of last month was run by Ato Lakew Gebeyehu and his wife Misrak from their transition home for children, Koala House.

Families told heartbreaking stories of their time in Ethiopia - from witnessing their new baby choking on vomit, to a young boy being kept in a bucket to stop him from moving about. One family had to pay a bribe and others found their paperwork falsified with their child's age dramatically altered.

Other families discovered their new children had parents and sibilings who were still alive, when they had been told they were adopting orphans.

Adoptive familes have welcomed the news Mr Gebeyehu will no longer be in charge, but have condemned what they say is the Federal Government's "secrecy" surrounding the real reason he stood aside.

In April Attorney-General Robert McClelland lifted a temporary suspension of the program after concerns there may have been breaches of the Hague Convention, which ensures the welfare of children is the priority and that international adoptions are used only as a last resort. Australia is a signatory to the convention, but Ethiopia is not.

Mr Gebeyehu declined ABC News Online's interview request when he was in Australia last month to renegotiate a service agreement with the Attorney-General's Department.

The department said it did raise "credible and specific concerns" with Mr Gebeyehu about the problems within the program, but was "satisfied with the outcome of those enquiries".

But rather than renew his contract, it was unexpectedly announced that he would no longer continue to run the program and there would be a six-month transition period during which the Government would find someone else.

A statement from the Attorney-General's Department says the decision to end Mr Gebeyehu's employment "was mutual".

"During discussions about a new service agreement a mutual decision was made that Mr Lakew would transition from his role as the Australian representative," said the statement.

"Mr Lakew has been undertaking this role for nearly 20 years and is in his 70s."

But the decision came as surprise even to the Australian African Children's Aid and Support Association (AACASA), which is the peak support group for adoptive parents of Ethiopian children.

Its president Gaylene Cooper says she fully supports Mr Gebeyehu and his wife, and the unexpected outcome has left the organisation in the dark.

"Nobody's really saying why; there are a lot of rumours flying around that he's retiring ... but it was not his intention to go back home from Australia without signing the new service agreement," she said.

"We can only assume that something went wrong, but we don't really know. What both parties are saying is that it was a mutual agreement, so that's really the only information we've been given. It doesn't really leave things in a very good situation.

"Obviously they've both agreed to keep it behind closed doors. Our biggest concern is, what are they going to do moving forward?

"Lakew's been doing this for 20 years, as has Misrak. From what I can gather, neither party intended this, so something's obviously not gone satisfactorily and this is what they've agreed on."

The ABC has also discovered that Mr Gebeyehu was sacked from World Vision in Ethiopia before his employment with the Australian Government.

"Ato Lakew Gebeyehu was a former agricultural employee with World Vision Ethiopia. He was dismissed more than a decade ago by World Vision for failing to attend to his duties," World Vision said in a statement to ABC News Online.

Adoptive parents of Ethiopian children told ABC News Online they are glad Mr Gebeyehu will no longer be the Australian representative and hope the change will give "future adoptive parents greater confidence in the process".

"We welcome the Attorney-General's recent decision not to renew the service agreement with Lakew and Misrak. For too long there have been too many questions about the way things have been done in Ethiopia, and it is time for a clean slate," they said.

"Adopted children have the right to know about the circumstances of their early life and this is an opportunity for adoptions between Australia and Ethiopia to move forward in transparency and confidence.

"Hopefully this will give future adoptive parents greater confidence in the process and, more importantly, children adopted from Ethiopia to Australia will have greater access to information about their personal histories with full disclosure and knowledge of all the records pertinent to their past.

"We would also like to know the reasoning behind the "mutual agreement" to end the arrangement between Lakew and the Attorney-General, so soon after the Attorney-General had expressed their support for Lakew in this role.

"The secrecy surrounding this decision only reinforces the lack of transparency that has characterised the regime in the past and serves to perpetuate the innuendo and suspicion surrounding the power of attorney and makes people wonder whether there is no smoke without fire."

In response to questions on claims of corruption within the program by parents, the Attorney-General's Department said: "Any allegations of corruption or misuse of funds should be referred to the Department for investigation."

But the ABC obtained documents showing the Howard government knew of serious concerns in 2005 and that the Rudd government was warned again in 2008 by Brussels-based human rights organisation Against Child Trafficking, after Mr Gebeyehu was arrested and held on suspicion of child trafficking.

He was later cleared after it was considered to be a case of mistaken identity, but Against Child Trafficking urged the Federal Government to look further into the case. The organisation says it received little response.



Thursday, June 17, 2010

Resource Super Profits Tax

RSPT, an irony in a democracy


Has the government's surprise RSPT shocked you, disgusted you or affected you financially? I wasn't usually interested in politics but this time I witnessed some friends suffered massive financial loss in the share market ever since the Henry Tax Review. I heard many miners lost their work. People from all walks of life are affected.

I guess if some big miners earn too much money from natural resources of the state, they may be obligated to pay more tax otherwise the rich gets richer and the poor gets poorer. And if mining activity brings about negative impact on the environment, they should pay tax or compensation too. However, I don't understand why the government had zero consultation with the mining industry and with the Australian people. Is this a democratic decision or an autocratic one?

Have you been affected by RSPT?



Here is a message from Keeping Mining Strong.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

A Better World needs joint efforts

I am not a politician and I am not really interested in politics. However, I have come to realize that as an individual in any society, I can not ignore things happening around me in my city, in my country, in the world or in the universe. Individual activities form the basis of society but what is happening in the society in turn affects individual behaviour. In democratic countries, we shouldn't be passively controlled by our governments if they have unreasonable or incorrect policies which have a negative impact on our life and our environment due to corruption or political reasons. Instead, we have to take action to protect our interests as ordinary citizens under critical circumstances. That is why every now and then, I will poke my head out of my personal space to look around to see what is happening.

There are many myths and prophecies about the year 2012, only less than two years away. I don't have a clue what will happen then, but I think 2012 will be a turning point. Whether it turns for the better or for the worse, it depends on what we do and how we deal with the problems in our society and in our daily life.

Let's hope with joint efforts, 2012 will be a turning point for a Better World rather than dark destruction of the mankind as some people predict.