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From Russia with love

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What the hell is going on with these guys. More to come


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Russians Not Lining Up to Adopt Americans

31 January 2013 | Issue 5058
By Jonathan Earle

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There are currently about 110,000 Russian children living in orphanages.

When the now-infamous ban on U.S. adoptions was first introduced in the State Duma in mid-December, some Russians suggested that a more appropriate response to the United States' sanctions-imposing Magnitsky Act would have been to push their compatriots to adopt American children.

"We shouldn't ban the adoption of our children, but encourage our people to start adopting American children, given the quality of life [in Russia]," tweeted @yrikostuchenko to TV host Vladimir Solovyov, one of the ban's early critics.

The idea of Russians adopting American children was floated at least as early as April, when children's ombudsman Pavel Astakhov, a long-standing opponent of international adoptions, encouraged Russians to get in line to take in American orphans "out of principle."

His comments came months before Russia ratified a bilateral adoption agreement with the United States aimed at strengthening oversight following a series of abuse scandals — including 19 deaths since the late 1990s — involving Russian orphans in U.S. adoptive families.

Though the agreement regulates adoptions in both directions, most, if not all, cases have involved U.S. parents and Russian orphans, not the other way around.

Whereas 45,000 Russians have been adopted by American families since 1999, the U.S. State Department is not aware of any cases in which Russian citizens have adopted children from the United States, a department spokesman said in an e-mail.

Outgoing U.S. adoptions do take place, but they're rare. According to State Department records, 286 U.S. orphans have been adopted by foreign citizens living abroad since April 2008. The receiving countries are mostly highly developed Western nations, led by Canada and the Netherlands.

Experts interview by The Moscow Times said they couldn't recall an instance in which a U.S. orphan moved to Russia.

"Our agency has not had a request for an outgoing case to Russia, and I do not know any other cases that have been done," Anna Belle Illien, executive director of Illien Adoptions International, one of a handful of U.S. adoption agencies that assists with outgoing adoptions, said by e-mail.

A spokeswoman for AdoptUSKids, a U.S. government organization that promotes adoption and connects adoptive families with orphans, said she didn't recall ever receiving questions from a Russian family about how to adopt a U.S. child.

It's not just American orphans; Russians don't adopt foreigners in general, said Yelena Fortuna, editor of the My Dears web portal for adoptive parents.

"Despite the fact that many adoptive parents can be picky … there are more than enough children [in Russia] to go around," she said.

Anton Zharov, a lawyer who specializes in children's issues, said there weren't any U.S. children for Russians to adopt, because all of them could eventually be placed in American families.

The only cases of Russians adopting foreigners, as far as Successful Orphans charity director Alexander Gezalov was aware, involved foreigners who had received Russian citizenship.

Everyone else was scared away by the bureaucracy. "Domestic adoptions are hard enough," he said, adding that the documents, visas and money required to adopt an American were just too daunting.

Immediately following the passage of the U.S. adoption ban, part of the so-called Dima Yakovlev Act, President Vladimir Putin ordered the government to boost domestic adoptions by, among other things, simplifying the domestic adoptions procedure.

A plurality of respondents 37 percent, to a Jan. 18-21 poll by the independent Levada Center said this was the single most important thing that the government could do to help orphans.

The Education and Science Ministry, which oversees adoptions, is considering lowering bureaucratic hurdles for prospective families and paying 100,000 rubles ($3,300) to those who adopt "hard-to-place" children, including those with disabilities, Kommersant reported Monday.

Such families currently receive 13,000 rubles ($430), and Kommersant quoted an adoptive mother as saying it can take more than the allotted three months to collect eight required stamps from three doctors and five clinics, meaning that many families are forced to return to square one.

There are currently about 110,000 Russian children living in orphanages, a number that appears to be falling. In the past two years, 5,000 more children were either adopted or placed in foster families than were entered into the orphanage system, the newspaper reported.

Meanwhile, the Investigative Committee on Wednesday opened a symbolic criminal case against an American family convicted of abusing their adopted 6-year-old Russian son, committee chief Alexander Bastrykin said, Interfax reported.

Nine other such cases involving 12 children are pending, and the U.S. Justice Department has refused to provide documents requested by the Russian government in four of them, an Investigative Committee spokesman said late last month.

Zharov, the lawyer, dismissed the investigations. "I don't think this is about justice; I think it's about politics," he said, explaining that most, if not all, of the parents had already been convicted by U.S. courts and therefore, according to Russian law, could not be retried in a Russian one.

 
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Russia scraps anti-crime accord with US

Moscow has terminated a 10-year-old agreement with the US on fighting terrorism, corruption, and cross-border crime.

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Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, signed the order scrapping the deal saying it was 'no longer relevant' [EPA]

Russia has pulled out of an anti-crime accord with the United States, the latest sign of rising tensions between Moscow and Washington.

Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev signed an order to scrap the 10-year-old agreement "because it was no longer relevant," his office said on Wednesday.

The agreement covered fighting terrorism, corruption and cross-border crimes such as drug smuggling and human trafficking.

Alexei Pushkov, head of Russia's parliamentary foreign affairs committee, told the Interfax news agency that the decision reflected Russia's ability to manage its internal affairs without outside help.

A US embassy spokesman was not immediately available for comment.

The agreement is just one of several bilateral cooperation deals that Moscow has decided to abandon.

Last year, Russia expelled the US International Development Agency and also warned it would not extend the Nunn-Lugar programme helping it dismantle nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons stockpiles.

On Friday, the US withdrew from a joint civil society group.

President Barack Obama's efforts to 'reset' relations with Russia has met a markedly colder wind from the Kremlin since Vladimir Putin returned to the presidency in May.

Faced with unprecedented street protests against his 12-year rule, Putin accused the US State Department of staging the protests in order to weaken Russia.

Treason law

After Putin's inauguration, the Kremlin-controlled parliament then quickly rubber-stamped a series of laws imposing new restrictions in an apparent bid to curb American influence in Russia.

Non-governmental organisations funded from abroad were required to register as 'foreign agents,' a term intended to ruin their credibility among Russians for whom the term sounds synonymous to spies. The Russian definition of treason was also expanded to include potentially any contact with a foreign organisation.

Two US-based NGOs have closed their Russian offices in response to the new laws.

The business daily Kommersant reported on Wednesday that the National Democratic Institute and the International Republican Institute, which ran programmes championing democratic rights, moved their staff to Lithuania after Russian security officials threatened to prosecute them under the new treason law.

Amnesty International Russia director Sergei Nikitin wrote on his blog on Wednesday that the closures "show the stability of the general trend: the pressure on civil society in Russia continues."

After Congress passed a law introducing sanctions against Russian officials involved in human rights abuses, Russia responded by banning all adoptions of Russian orphans by Americans.

The country's top investigative agency is also investigating a sexual abuse case against American parents already convicted in the US of abusing their adopted Russian child but given suspended sentences.

Lawmakers in the Kremlin-controlled lower house have also rushed to propose such measures as banning English phrases from Russian and limiting marriages between Russian officials and foreigners.

Outgoing US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told NPR on Wednesday that the Russian adoption ban was 'tragic' and the decision to expel the USAID "really hurts the Russian people."
 
yeah they've had enough of something. Something happened between the two countries that we're not privy to. It's obvious they've been offended by something and they're just cutting ties step by step.
 
What the hell is going on with these guys. More to come


2qwjxpz.gif


Russians Not Lining Up to Adopt Americans

31 January 2013 | Issue 5058
By Jonathan Earle

2ewkt1f.jpg

There are currently about 110,000 Russian children living in orphanages.

When the now-infamous ban on U.S. adoptions was first introduced in the State Duma in mid-December, some Russians suggested that a more appropriate response to the United States' sanctions-imposing Magnitsky Act would have been to push their compatriots to adopt American children.

"We shouldn't ban the adoption of our children, but encourage our people to start adopting American children, given the quality of life [in Russia]," tweeted @yrikostuchenko to TV host Vladimir Solovyov, one of the ban's early critics.

The idea of Russians adopting American children was floated at least as early as April, when children's ombudsman Pavel Astakhov, a long-standing opponent of international adoptions, encouraged Russians to get in line to take in American orphans "out of principle."

His comments came months before Russia ratified a bilateral adoption agreement with the United States aimed at strengthening oversight following a series of abuse scandals — including 19 deaths since the late 1990s — involving Russian orphans in U.S. adoptive families.

Though the agreement regulates adoptions in both directions, most, if not all, cases have involved U.S. parents and Russian orphans, not the other way around.

Whereas 45,000 Russians have been adopted by American families since 1999, the U.S. State Department is not aware of any cases in which Russian citizens have adopted children from the United States, a department spokesman said in an e-mail.

Outgoing U.S. adoptions do take place, but they're rare. According to State Department records, 286 U.S. orphans have been adopted by foreign citizens living abroad since April 2008. The receiving countries are mostly highly developed Western nations, led by Canada and the Netherlands.

Experts interview by The Moscow Times said they couldn't recall an instance in which a U.S. orphan moved to Russia.

"Our agency has not had a request for an outgoing case to Russia, and I do not know any other cases that have been done," Anna Belle Illien, executive director of Illien Adoptions International, one of a handful of U.S. adoption agencies that assists with outgoing adoptions, said by e-mail.

A spokeswoman for AdoptUSKids, a U.S. government organization that promotes adoption and connects adoptive families with orphans, said she didn't recall ever receiving questions from a Russian family about how to adopt a U.S. child.

It's not just American orphans; Russians don't adopt foreigners in general, said Yelena Fortuna, editor of the My Dears web portal for adoptive parents.

"Despite the fact that many adoptive parents can be picky … there are more than enough children [in Russia] to go around," she said.

Anton Zharov, a lawyer who specializes in children's issues, said there weren't any U.S. children for Russians to adopt, because all of them could eventually be placed in American families.

The only cases of Russians adopting foreigners, as far as Successful Orphans charity director Alexander Gezalov was aware, involved foreigners who had received Russian citizenship.

Everyone else was scared away by the bureaucracy. "Domestic adoptions are hard enough," he said, adding that the documents, visas and money required to adopt an American were just too daunting.

Immediately following the passage of the U.S. adoption ban, part of the so-called Dima Yakovlev Act, President Vladimir Putin ordered the government to boost domestic adoptions by, among other things, simplifying the domestic adoptions procedure.

A plurality of respondents 37 percent, to a Jan. 18-21 poll by the independent Levada Center said this was the single most important thing that the government could do to help orphans.

The Education and Science Ministry, which oversees adoptions, is considering lowering bureaucratic hurdles for prospective families and paying 100,000 rubles ($3,300) to those who adopt "hard-to-place" children, including those with disabilities, Kommersant reported Monday.

Such families currently receive 13,000 rubles ($430), and Kommersant quoted an adoptive mother as saying it can take more than the allotted three months to collect eight required stamps from three doctors and five clinics, meaning that many families are forced to return to square one.

There are currently about 110,000 Russian children living in orphanages, a number that appears to be falling. In the past two years, 5,000 more children were either adopted or placed in foster families than were entered into the orphanage system, the newspaper reported.

Meanwhile, the Investigative Committee on Wednesday opened a symbolic criminal case against an American family convicted of abusing their adopted 6-year-old Russian son, committee chief Alexander Bastrykin said, Interfax reported.

Nine other such cases involving 12 children are pending, and the U.S. Justice Department has refused to provide documents requested by the Russian government in four of them, an Investigative Committee spokesman said late last month.

Zharov, the lawyer, dismissed the investigations. "I don't think this is about justice; I think it's about politics," he said, explaining that most, if not all, of the parents had already been convicted by U.S. courts and therefore, according to Russian law, could not be retried in a Russian one.


^^^
I never read that much in the 3 years that comprised my freshman year of college :rolleyes:
 
yeah they've had enough of something. Something happened between the two countries that we're not privy to. It's obvious they've been offended by something and they're just cutting ties step by step.

That something = Syria
 
Where!? I don't believe you.

"The agreement covered fighting terrorism, corruption and cross-border crimes such as drug smuggling and human trafficking."

So Russian officials will no longer be cooperating with DEA? Like I said, good news for any Russian sources.
 
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