Mariette Williams Discovers She Was Taken without
Parents' Consent
After thirty years, a Haitian woman
finally revealed the
irregularities that took place during her adoption process, according to media
reports last Friday, November 27.
Mariette
Williams, who was adopted in 1986, discovered that she was never given up for
adoption and that the process occurred without the consent of her biological
parents.
Her
adoption papers reveal the name of an orphan who no longer exists and who
belonged to Rose-Marie Platel, her godmother. Patel was responsible for the
unauthorized adoption when Williams was nearly three and a half years old.
The
woman’s adopted parents, Sandra and Albert Knopf, live near Vancouver, Canada.
During the adoption process 30 years ago, a man named Henry Wiebe told the
hopeful parents that they could adopt a child in Haiti for US$3,500, and two
for $6,000.
The
negotiator brought Knopf to the orphanage managed by Platel in Haiti. It was
there where Knopf found little girls with parasites, infected eyes, and
apparently malnourished.
The
Canadian couple never met the Haitian attorney who completed the paperwork, nor
did they go before a court in order to be approved by a judge. Rose-Marie
Platel, the “godmother,” was in charge of everything.
Knopf
admitted to her daughter that there were red flags during the
process: wrong birthdates and the sudden appearance of documents.
After searching to meet her biological family,
Williams found a Facebook profile page of Pestel, Haiti, a town mentioned in
the adoption documents. She posted a message on the town’s social network that
read: “My name is Mariette. I am looking for my family.”
Weeks
later, she discovered that she had four sisters and two brothers in Haiti; her
mother was still living, but her father had passed away.
Adoption
irregularities like these frequently occurred in the Caribbean country. In
2013, the Center of Journalistic Investigation (CIPER) in Chile published a
report on the unusual practices of the Multicolor Families Foundation, a
Haitian organization which oversaw the adoption of Haitian children by Chilean
families.
According
to the report, the foundation did not keep a directory or any sort of registry
for each adoption. Instead of working with an attorney, the foundation went
through a proxy “with good contacts.” CIPER further uncovered that at least
seven kids were given up for adoption without being approved legally.
The
organization was never accredited in Chile, and although they had legal
personnel in Haiti, the foundation operated under the guise of a protection
house for children, which originally allowed them to establish themselves in
the country.
http://panampost.com/sabrina-martin/2015/12/01/haitian-woman-reveals-irregularities-in-her-adoption-30-years-later/
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire