NEW YORK (AP) - U.S.-based advocates of international adoption, who
have grown accustomed to discouraging news in recent years, have a new
cause for dismay: a bill moving through Russia's parliament that would
bar Americans from adopting Russian children.
The measure, which won overwhelming approval Friday
in the lower house of parliament, is retaliation for a new U.S. law
imposing sanctions on Russians deemed to be human rights violators.
"It's two countries duking it out," said Adam
Pertman of the Donaldson Adoption Institute. "The adults are playing
politics, and it's unfortunate to the extreme that children are being
used as pawns."
The fate of the bill is uncertain. It needs
approval by parliament's upper house and by President Vladimir Putin.
Yet already it has added to an array of controversies and policy changes
that have muddled the image of international adoption in the U.S.
Adoptions from abroad seemed to be on a perpetual
upswing but peaked at 22,884 in 2004 and have declined steadily since
then to 9,319 in 2011, because of factors ranging from corruption and
fraud to nationalist pride.
In the case of Russia, UNICEF estimates it has more
than 700,000 orphans and abandoned children. More than 60,000 of them
have been adopted by Americans over the past 20 years, but the annual
figure has plummeted from 5,862 in 2004 to 962 in 2011.
Chuck Johnson, CEO of the National Council for
Adoption, said there is a faction of Russian politicians who have
long-term antipathy toward foreign adoptions and have seized upon the
pending bill as a vehicle for their cause.
"The Russian Duma is ignoring the many thousands of
very happy children who have been adopted by loving U.S. families,"
Johnson said. "The bottom line is children should not fall victim to
senseless politicking."
Among the adoption advocates who have been
following the Moscow events closely is Alexander D'Jamoos, a 21-year-old
sophomore at the University of Texas.
D'Jamoos, who was born without legs, grew up in one
of the many Russian orphanages that accommodate children with
disabilities. In 2006, at age 15, he was flown to Texas Scottish Rite
Hospital for Children in Dallas, where physicians fitted him with
prosthesis to enable him to walk.
The Dallas couple who had agreed to host him
temporarily, Helene and Michael D'Jamoos, became so fond of him that
they proceeded to adopt him in 2007. Since then, the young man has
climbed Mount Kilimanjaro, became a talented skier, and is pursuing
studies in government, international relations and Russian.
He has been following the progress of the proposed adoption ban in Russia with growing anger.
"It uses children as a tool for political
demagoguery," he said. "It's extremely insensitive to children in Russia
who've spent their whole lives in those orphanages, and insulting to
the happy families here in the U.S. who have adopted Russian children."
Russia has tried to increase domestic adoptions
over the past several years, but there also has been resentment about
adoptions by Americans, fueled by a few high-profile incidents.
In 2010, a Tennessee woman sent her 7-year-old
adopted Russian son back to Moscow on a plane alone, saying he had
emotional problems and she could no longer care for him. In 2008, a
Russian toddler adopted by a Virginia family died after his father left
him in a hot car for hours; the father was found not guilty of
involuntary manslaughter.
According to the National Council for Adoption, 19
Russian adoptees have died at the hands of their American parents. Those
deaths were among the factors that led to a painstakingly negotiated
U.S.-Russia adoption agreement that took effect Nov. 1.
The agreement tightens oversight of adoption
agencies, requires prospective adoptive parents to complete up to 80
hours of training and permits Russia to engage in post-adoption
monitoring of children adopted by U.S. families.
The bill pending in Moscow would nullify that
agreement. Its fate may rest with Putin, who on Thursday described the
measure as a legitimate response to the new U.S. law targeting human
rights violators but did not specify whether he would sign it.
The U.S. law, called the Magnitsky Act, stems from
the case of Sergei Magnitsky, a Russian lawyer who was arrested after
accusing officials of a $230 million tax fraud. He was repeatedly denied
medical treatment and died in jail in 2009. Russian rights groups claim
he was severely beaten and accused the Kremlin of failing to prosecute
those responsible.
Regarding the retaliatory adoption ban, the U.S.
says it would needlessly stop hundreds of Russian children from finding
families.
"The welfare of children is simply too important to
be linked to other issues in our bilateral relationship," U.S.
Ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul said in a statement.
U.S.-based adoption advocates indicated there were intensive efforts under way to derail the bill.
The Joint Council on International Children's
Services, which represents many U.S. groups interested in adoption and
child welfare, said it was working with both American and Russian
officials to resolve the matter, urging them to "put the needs and best
interest of each child as the primary consideration."
Others tracking progress of the bill include Denise
Bierly of the American Academy of Adoption Attorneys, who called it "a
significant step backward for the welfare of children," and Bill
Blacquiere of Bethany Christian Services, one of the largest U.S.
adoption agencies.
Blacquiere said that child welfare needs in Russia
are extensive, and that its special-needs children would be better
served if Russia availed itself of American expertise rather than strain
bilateral relations. Russia has taken some steps to improve its foster
care system and move more children out of orphanages, he said, but needs
to invest more government funds.
Several adoption advocates suggested that the Russian bill was damaging even if it doesn't become law.
"Even if it just bravado, it still does harm," said
Adam Pertman, the Donaldson Institute's executive director.
"International adoption is already cast in a bad light, and some people
will say, 'This is just a minefield. I'm not going to go there.' The
losers are the children."