Hopwin wrote:
Crap, what happened to this thread?
Out of courtesy, I'll refrain from giving my opinion on that part.
Midgen:
This, particularly (bottom of the piece) - "Before the Jan. 12 earthquake devastated Haiti, the charity had planned to buy land and build an orphanage, school and church in Magante on the northern coast of the Dominican Republic, BBC News reported. But after the disaster, the mission's aim became to
'rescue Haitian orphans abandoned on the streets, makeshift hospitals or from collapsed orphanages in Port-au-Prince and surrounding areas, and bring them to New Life Children's Refuge in Cabarete, Dominican Republic,' the charity stated in an online document."
That doesn't appear to be accidental, or a misunderstanding. By their own admission they seemed to be going in with the express intent of removing children from the country. So that makes the crux of the issue whether or not they had the right (or authority) to do so, particularly if they were taking away children whose parents were still alive and didn't consent to letting them go. I personally take little issue with the former, a hell of a lot of issue with the latter. No one knows the right of it yet. I'd say Stathol has (per usual) the best take on it, though...
Stathol wrote:
There have been a ton of relief workers and organizations on the ground in Haiti for some time now. So far, this one group is the only one who apparently found it "necessary" to take a group of children out of country. This doesn't automatically make them wrong, of course, but it raises reasonable doubt for the necessity of their actions. Unless there was something about their particular circumstances which made them unique out of all other aid organizations in Haiti right now, then it would seem, at first glance, that the law and survival were never truly in conflict. In which case, this was all a Bad Idea(TM) and the Haitian government was entirely correct to stop them.