6 Haitian orphans who had been detained at Port-Au-Prince airport have arrived in US

By AP
Wednesday, February 24, 2010

6 Haitian orphans who had been detained land in US

MIAMI — Six Haitian orphans completed a whirlwind journey Wednesday when they landed in Miami and were united with their new parents, four days after Haitian police seized them and sent them to a tent city because of fears they were being kidnapped.

“They’re very calm,” Sabrina Sosa of a children’s home helping with accommodations. “I guess they’re still in some kind of shock.”

The orphans were headed to the Port-Au-Prince airport Saturday when a group of 20 men blocked four women accompanying the children, shouting: “You can’t take our children!” Police briefly detained the women, and the orphans — ages 1-5 — spent three nights sleeping on the ground in a tent city. The U.S. Embassy official carrying the documents needed to take them through immigration had been running late.

The children were with their adoptive parents and being bathed and fed a typical Haitian meal of brown beans, chicken, rice and plantains, said Sosa, of His House Children’s Home.

Fears of child trafficking have made it harder than ever for impoverished Haitian children to be adopted. Last month, 10 U.S. missionaries trying to take a busload of 33 children to the Dominican Republic without proper documentation were arrested. It turned out none of the children were orphans and two Americans remain in jail in Port-au-Prince.

A judge hearing their case said Wednesday that he expects to decide their fate this week.

In a case involving an orphan rescue organized by Pennsylvania Governor Edward Rendell, the federal government has asked the American Red Cross to trace the family ties of 12 children among 53 flown to Pittsburgh on Jan. 18.

University of Pittsburgh Medical Center consultant Leslie McCombs said the children all had documents signed by at least one parent and Haitian court officials surrendering custody. But she said they didn’t have American families waiting for them, which was part of federal guidelines established the day those children left Haiti.

Federal and state officials have defended bringing the children to the U.S.

“We weren’t going to separate 12 kids from the group and the only caretakers they’ve ever known and send them back to an orphanage without any adult caretakers, and food, and water,” said Homeland Security spokesman Matthew Chandler. “Anyone with a heart wasn’t going to do that.”

Thousands of desperate Haitian parents, unable to care for their own children, have eagerly given the youngsters away in hopes of giving them a better life. At the same time, they are terrified they will be tricked by predators who will enslave or sexually abuse the children.

Haiti’s government immediately halted new adoptions in the chaos that followed the Jan. 12 quake, allowing only those already approved to move forward.

In Miami, two awaiting parents, Josh and Katy Manges, had been in the process of adopting 2-year-old Malachi since he was a few months old. Born with a deformity in his thigh bone, the boy was abandoned at a Haitian hospital when he was just a few weeks old.

When the couple saw him for the first time at His House, they greeted him with hugs and kisses. Katy Manges cried, smiled and laughed. The couple had only seen photographs of him.

“This is your mommy and I’m your daddy,” Josh Manges said.

Within 30 minutes, he was calling them just that, reaching out his hands to be lifted up and later talking on the phone with his three new siblings back home in Chambersburg, Pa., southwest of Harrisburg.

“Hello,” he told them over speaker phone. “I love you.”

Later in the evening, he kicked a plastic ball and played with bright colored plastic toys. He laughed and cooed as his mother held him and playfully moved him up and down in her lap.

Back home, 7-year-old Noah, one of the couple’s other children, has already made Malachi’s bed and put his clothes in the dresser.

“He’ll be spoiled,” Josh Manges said.

Associated Press writers Jonathan M. Katz, Frank Bajak and Niko Price in Haiti and Amy Forliti in Minneapolis contributed to this report.

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