Russia, US agree on safe adoption rules
By Maria Domnitskaya
July 14, 2011 / The Voice of Russia
Following 13 months of complicated talks, Russia and the US have finally agreed on child adoption rules. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton signed a bilateral agreement on cooperation that will make the process of adoption more transparent and safe.
The treaty prohibits the so-called “independent” adoption through mediators. Now this option will be only entrusted to US agencies observing the 1993 Hague Convention on intercountry adoption. At present, not every one of the 67 agencies engaged in the adoption of Russian kids in the US live up to these standards. Therefore, the upcoming reassessment in the US and the Russian Ministry of Education is going to reduce their number threefold.
In compliance with the document, all Russian children adopted by American families will have dual citizenship, whereas earlier they lost their national status as citizens of the Russian Federation straight after document execution. During the first three years after adoption, US social workers will have to pay four visits to the family and inform Moscow on the conditions the kid is living under. Agencies should follow the life of these children until they turn 18 and let the Russian side know about any cases of violence.
Negotiations to this end took Russia and the US seven rounds to coordinate their positions, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said in an exclusive interview with the Voice of Russia Washington office:
"I was very gratified when eventually we persuaded our partners to sit down and look at this situation and we agreed a treaty which protects Russian kids, which ensures the mechanisms to monitor how they are doing in the families in the US, who adopted them, and which also makes sure there will be no so-called independent adoptions, all adoptions would be made through a competent authority, to be designed by the US, the federal government and the states, which would be responsible for checking whether the candidates who adopt a Russian child are psychologically stable and which would also be responsible for making sure that there is an access of the Russian government to a kid if need be. This is all part of the agreement, and I believe it is a fair deal."
As of today, the number of Russian children adopted in the United States exceeds 100,000. Following a series of egregious cases of foster parents abusing and even killing the kids, Moscow started insisting on a bilateral agreement regulating the transfer of orphans to new families. Utmost indignation was stirred up by the incident involving 7-year-old Artyom Savelyev whose adoptive mother Torry Hansen sent him back to Moscow by plane. The boy was carrying a letter indicating his mother’s refusal to take care of him any longer. The last drop making the cup run over was the terrible death of Ivan Skorobogatov of hunger and assault - American doctors found over 80 injuries on his body. The incident nearly ended in Russia’s freezing adoption by US citizens and eventually encouraged Washington to enter negotiations.
Now the agreement will require parents to provide any information about the child at the first request of Russian guardianship service workers and admit inspectors into the house if necessary. Moscow also managed to persuade its partner to include a clause in the document that authorizes it to initiate its own trials against foreign parents if found guilty of child abuse.
The treaty specifies requirements for adoptive parents as well. The tragical occurrences with Russian children abroad often revealed their new parents’ mental disturbances, says Pavel Astakhov, the Ombudsman for Children’s Rights in the Russian President’s Administration, who has just returned from Washington:
"There is a need to provide documents confirming the adoptive parents’ psychological and mental stability. If these papers generate doubt, we may demand a reaffirmation of their origins or an extra testing for candidates," Pavel Astakhov explained.
In America, where adoption agreements do not require ratification, the one signed by Moscow and Washington came into force immediately. In Russia, it was sent to the Parliament for ratification. The country has a similar treaty with Italy and debates the issue with France and Israel as well. Pavel Astakhov believes such documents have to be concluded with all countries worldwide.