Haiti  Pedophilia

Are Haiti's children being flown out to paedophiliacs with the knowledge and help of the UN and USA?

http://theflucase.com

29 January 2010

Last week, Austria's ORF reported that planes with small children on board leave Haiti every day with the permission of the UN and the USA even though, as John Pilger notes in a report (below), the US military and UN have taken control of all airports, ports and roads in Haiti.

One airplane with 106 children aged between six months and seven years old from Haiti's capital was reported to have landed in Eindhoven in The Netherlands. The adoption agency, which organised the flight, told reporters  that all the children apart from nine had new parents in the Netherlands and Luxemburg.

Haitian children are also being flown out in large numbers for adoption to to people in the US and Germany under the eyes of US and UN personnel.

But the Austrian government said that no one in Austria had applied for adoption, thereby underlining that adopting children has to follow a formal and lengthy procedure in normal cases?

Why is this procedure not being followed now? How can children be taken from Haiti before a thorough effort has been made to find any suriviving parents or relatives, something that could take months given the scale of the earthquake disaster. How can they be sent flown through airports guarded by the US and UN to people whose background has not been adequately checked and without an adequate monitoring system?

Why are these children not being given safe shelter in Haiti?

The extent to which the "power elites" indulge in paedophilia has been well documented by the case of Marc Dutroux in Belgium. Recently the French Minister of Culture Frederic Mitterand described in his autobiography paying Asian boys for sex.

The scale of paedophila today is well known.

The UN and WHO are not only vehicles of the climate change and swine flu scam. They have also become vehicles to supply the "elite" with helpless children for their paedophilic practises.

There should be an immediate prohibition on flying any children out of Haiti. The adoption agencies who are engaged in this business should be investigated by the police as should the people who have adopted children, and the children should be returned to Haiti.

 

The kidnapping of Haiti

John PIlger

 http://www.johnpilger.com/page.asp?partid=564

 In his latest column for the New Statesman, John Pilger describes the "swift and crude" appropriation of earthquake-ravaged Haiti by the militarised Obama administration. With George W. Bush attending to the "relief effort" and Bill Clinton the UN's man, The Comedians, Graham Greene's dark novel about exploted Haiti comes to mind.

The theft of Haiti has been swift and crude. On 22 January, the United States secured “formal approval” from the United Nations to take over all air and sea ports in Haiti, and to “secure” roads. No Haitian signed the agreement, which has no basis in law. Power rules in an American naval blockade and the arrival of 13,000 marines, special forces, spooks and mercenaries, none with humanitarian relief training.

The airport in the capital, Port-au-Prince, is now an American military base and relief flights have been re-routed to the Dominican Republic. All flights stopped for three hours for the arrival of Hillary Clinton. Critically injured Haitians waited unaided as 800 American residents in Haiti were fed, watered and evacuated. Six days passed before the US Air Force dropped bottled water to people suffering thirst and dehydration.

The first TV reports played a critical role, giving the impression of widespread criminal mayhem. Matt Frei, the BBC reporter dispatched from Washington, seemed on the point of hyperventilation as he brayed about the “violence” and need for “security”. In spite of the demonstrable dignity of the earthquake victims, and evidence of citizens’ groups toiling unaided to rescue people, and even an American general’s assessment that the violence in Haiti was considerably less than before the earthquake, Frei claimed that “looting is the only industry” and “the dignity of Haiti’s past is long forgotten.” Thus, a history of unerring US violence and exploitation in Haiti was consigned to the victims. “There’s no doubt,” reported Frei in the aftermath of America’s bloody invasion of Iraq in 2003, “that the desire to bring good, to bring American values to the rest of the world, and especially now to the Middle East... is now increasingly tied up with military power.”

In a sense, he was right. Never before in so-called peacetime have human relations been as militarised by rapacious power. Never before has an American president subordinated his government to the military establishment of his discredited predecessor, as Barack Obama has done. In pursuing George W. Bush’s policy of war and domination, Obama has sought from Congress an unprecedented military budget in excess of $700 billion. He has become, in effect, the spokesman for a military coup.

For the people of Haiti the implications are clear, if grotesque. With US troops in control of their country, Obama has appointed George W. Bush to the “relief effort”: a parody surely lifted from Graham Greene’s The Comedians, set in Papa Doc’s Haiti. As president, Bush’s relief effort following Hurricane Katrina in 2005 amounted to an ethnic cleansing of many of New Orleans’ black population. In 2004, he ordered the kidnapping of the democratically-elected prime minister of Haiti, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, and exiled him in Africa. The popular Aristide had had the temerity to legislate modest reforms, such as a minimum wage for those who toil in Haiti’s sweatshops.

When I was last in Haiti, I watched very young girls stooped in front of whirring, hissing, binding machines at the Port-au-Prince Superior Baseball Plant. Many had swollen eyes and lacerated arms. I produced a camera and was thrown out. Haiti is where America makes the equipment for its hallowed national game, for next to nothing. Haiti is where Walt Disney contractors make Mickey Mouse pjamas, for next to nothing. The US controls Haiti’s sugar, bauxite and sisal. Rice-growing was replaced by imported American rice, driving people into the cities and towns and jerry-built housing. Years after year, Haiti was invaded by US marines, infamous for atrocities that have been their specialty from the Philippines to Afghanistan.

Bill Clinton is another comedian, having got himself appointed the UN’s man in Haiti. Once fawned upon by the BBC as “Mr. Nice Guy... bringing democracy back to a sad and troubled land”, Clinton is Haiti’s most notorious privateer, demanding de-regulation of the economy for the benefit of the sweatshop barons. Lately, he has been promoting a $55m deal to turn the north of Haiti into an American-annexed “tourist playground”.

Not for tourists is the US building its fifth biggest embassy in Port-au-Prince. Oil was found in Haiti’s waters decades ago and the US has kept it in reserve until the Middle East begins to run dry. More urgently, an occupied Haiti has a strategic importance in Washington’s “rollback” plans for Latin America. The goal is the overthrow of the popular democracies in Venezuela, Bolivia and Ecuador, control of Venezuela’s abundant oil reserves and sabotage of the growing regional cooperation that has given millions their first taste of an economic and social justice long denied by US-sponsored regimes.

The first rollback success came last year with the coup against President Jose Manuel Zelaya in Honduras who also dared advocate a minimum wage and that the rich pay tax. Obama’s secret support for the illegal regime carries a clear warning to vulnerable governments in central America. Last October, the regime in Colombia, long bankrolled by Washington and supported by death squads, handed the US seven military bases to, according to US air force documents, “combat anti-US governments in the region”.

Media propaganda has laid the ground for what may well be Obama’s next war. On 14 December, researchers at the University of West England published first findings of a ten-year study of the BBC’s reporting of Venezuela. Of 304 BBC reports, only three mentioned any of the historic reforms of the Chavez government, while the majority denigrated Chavez’s extraordinary democratic record, at one point comparing him to Hitler.

Such distortion and its attendant servitude to western power are rife across the Anglo-American corporate media. People who struggle for a better life, or for life itself, from Venezuela to Honduras to Haiti, deserve our suppor

 

 

http://test.orf.at/go/news/s47171.html

 

Adoptionsmissbrauch bei Kindern in Haiti
Kritik an übereilten Adoptionen 21.01. 00:00

Hilfsorganisationen in Haiti haben am Donnerstag vor vorschnellen Adoptionen gewarnt. In vielen Fällen würden die Kinder so rasch ins Ausland gebracht, dass keine Zeit bleibe, nach überlebenden Verwandten zu suchen, kritisierte unter anderen der Verein Word Vision. Derzeit verlassen jeden Tag Flugzeuge mit Dutzenden Kindern an Bord den Karibik-Staat - Ziel ist meist Europa oder die USA.

Neue Eltern in den Niederlanden
Am Donnerstag landete eine Maschine mit 106 Kindern aus der haitianischen Hauptstadt Port-au-Prince im niederländischen Eindhoven. Reporter berichteten, die Kinder seien zwischen sechs Monate und sieben Jahre alt gewesen.

Die Adoptionsagentur, die den Flug organisiert hatte, versicherte gegenüber Journalisten, dass bis auf neun Kinder alle bereits neue Eltern in den Niederlanden und Luxemburg hätten.

Kinder auch nach Deutschland und in USA
Auch in den USA kamen bereits am Dienstag die ersten 50 Adoptivkinder an. Deutschland vereinfachte am Donnerstag die Einreisebestimmungen für Kinder aus Haiti. In den nächsten Tagen sollen 30 Kinder, die bereits an deutsche Eltern vermittelt wurden, in ihrer neuen Heimat ankommen.

"Familien wieder zusammenführen"
Doch die Kritik an der raschen Verschickung der Kinder wächst. "Übereilte neue Adoptionen würden viele Familien auf Dauer auseinanderreißen", lautete ein Aufruf der Organisationen World Vision und Save the Children. "Die Erfahrung hat gezeigt, dass die meisten Kinder überlebende Verwandte haben. Die Anstrengungen müssen dahingehen, diese zu finden und die Familien wieder zusammenzuführen."

Nur mit Begleitung über Landesgrenze
Hier seien klare Adoptionsrichtlinien der haitianischen Regierung notwendig, forderten die Hilfsorganisationen. Besorgt sei man auch, dass die Kinder vermehrt ohne Begleitung in die benachbarte Dominikanische Republik geschickt würden. Kinder sollten Haiti derzeit nur in Begleitung von Verwandten verlassen dürfen, auch zur medizinischen Versorgung.

22.000 auf Suchlisten registriert
In dem vom Beben unversehrt gebliebenen SOS-Kinderdorf Santo sollen laut SOS-Koordinator Georg Willeit in Kürze die ersten vereinsamten Kinder aufgenommen werden, um dort vorübergehend Schutz und Geborgenheit zu finden.

"Ich sage bewusst nicht Waisen", betonte Willeit. "Das Chaos ist so groß, dass nicht mit absoluter Sicherheit geklärt werden kann, ob die Kinder noch Eltern oder Verwandte haben." Willeit sprach sich entschieden dagegen aus, allein gelassene Kinder auszufliegen und damit noch stärker zu entwurzeln. Vielmehr bemühe sich seine Organisation darum, Eltern und Verwandte wiederzufinden.

Derzeit habe das Internationale Rote Kreuz in Haiti mehr als 22.000 Personen auf Suchlisten registriert.

Viele Kinder haben Familien
Auch das UNO-Kinderhilfswerk (UNICEF) warnte vor überstürzten Adoptionen. Viele der rund 50.000 Kinder, die vor dem Beben in Haiti in Krippen und Heimen untergebracht gewesen seien, seien von ihren Familien dorthin gebracht worden, um ihnen eine bessere Versorgung zu ermöglichen.

"Wir erleben auch, dass Menschen bei uns in Köln anrufen und sagen: 'Ich könnte ein Kind bei mir aufnehmen'", berichtete der deutsche UNICEF-Sprecher Rudi Tarneden gegenüber der Nachrichtenagentur dpa. Das wäre laut Tarneder aber nicht im Interesse der Kinder.

"Stellen Sie sich umgekehrt einmal vor, in Hamburg oder Köln wäre ein schweres Erdbeben, und es würden Helfer aus China einfliegen und die Kinder von der Straße aufsammeln, um sie zu neuen Eltern zu bringen."

Schutzzentren für Minderjährige
UNICEF richtet in Haiti deshalb Schutzzentren für rund 900 Minderjährige ein. "Tausende Kinder im Erdbebengebiet schlagen sich allein durch. Sie sind von Mangelernährung, Krankheiten und Ausbeutung bedroht", erklärte Tarneden. Geplant seien auch sichere Zonen für unter Fünfjährige im Katastrophengebiet.

Keine Adoptionen nach Österreich
In Österreich gibt es laut Außenministerium bisher keine Anträge oder Interessenten für neue, rascher abgewickelte Adoptionen. Viele Anfragen verzeichne man allerdings wegen kurzfristiger Aufenthalte und Besuche von Opfern in Österreich. Viele wollten den traumatisierten Kindern helfen, so ein Sprecher. Diesbezüglich verweise man aber auf zuständige NGOs.