FarSky wrote:
The children were taken. That happened. And that was a crime, under the law. An investigation was staged to find out why they were taken, and whether to proceed with prosecution (if the child-takers simply acted with extremely poor judgment), or if the intent to enter the children into child trafficking was there.
What's the problem with this? I'm really trying to process that some people actually think it's proper to go into a foreign country, take children with no authorization or paperwork, and attempt to leave the country with them. For damn good reasons, there are check and balances in place. Why is the Haitian government expected to simply take the word of foreigners? Simply because they're Americans? "We're just there to help...by moving your children to another country...no, no, we only have the best intentions at heart." The Haitians have acted far more rationally and properly than the Americans in this, from all verifiable accounts.
This. Exactly this.
As well, consider how this all plays out a few months, or even a few years down the line. Suppose that they had been successful in removing the children to the Dominican Republic sans any form of authorization, documentation, or identification. By multiple accounts, many of the children weren't even old enough to talk. Under those circumstances, how can the missionaries be
certain that they were even truly orphaned, and not just separated from their parents in the chaos? Of course, they can't. And no one expects them to be able to, either. But if they're taken to some kind of local shelter, that's the best chance they have of being reunited with their parents. Or, failing that, it's the best way to determine that they truly are orphaned and need some kind of long-term care.
Similarly, for those who were given by their parents to the missionaries, are the missionaries certain that all parties fully understood the logistics (and permanence) of the arrangement? Did they speak French and the local Haitian Creole dialects and did they understand the local cultural framework well enough that they can be certain nothing was "lost in translation"? And moreover, were these parents even in any sort of condition (mentally and practically) to be making these kinds of
permanent decisions about their children? I understand that the missionaries had good intent, but duress is still duress. Asking someone to permanently cede their parental rights in the middle of a disaster is hardly fair, IMHO.
Once the children are removed to the Dominican Republic, it raises a host of practical issues. Suppose that 6 months or a year from now, some of the parents are in a better position to care for their children again. Suppose that they (quite understandably) want to "renege" on this agreement (which, since it was done illegally, has no real legal status) and get their children back. Maybe you're not aware that relations between Haiti and the Dominican Republic are rather tepid, at best. The DR wants no part of Haiti's poverty and social problems. As I understand it, the borders are less than open. The DR has, since the beginning of this, denied even temporary immigration by Haitian refugees. Even supposing that the parents could establish their relation to their children across the border (difficult, if not impossible, due once again to lack of any kind of documentation or paperwork), it may very well be impossible for them to do anything about it. Once their children are on the DR side of the border, they're at the mercy of a foreign government that is known to be less than sympathetic to their plight.
And this doesn't even begin to scratch all of the legal issues of citizenship, etc. that would have been created. Remember that they failed to obtain authorization from
either government -- not just the Haitian government. Which should make you question whether it would really have been possible for this orphanage in the DR to provide long-term care for these children. Since the children were there illegally according to the Dominican Republic, what do you think might happen when they were finally discovered there? Given the DR's policy towards Haitian refugees so far, the most likely answer is that they would be deported back to Haiti, where it's anyone's guess whether they'd be cared for or not.
But, you know, ... just keep making snide comments about "trains" whilst simultaneously and quite
deliberately ignoring every bit of real argument and analysis that disagrees with yours. And keep telling me what I think, and that I'm "against" missionaries and little children. I probably hate kittens, rainbows, and babies, too.