Families from Tennessee to California seek humanitarian parole for
adopted children in Haiti
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[September 23, 2024]
By DÁNICA COTO
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — At only 6 years old, Esai Reed has endured
three emergency evacuations from orphanages across Haiti as gangs
pillage and plunder their way through once peaceful communities.
He is now in northern Haiti under the care of a U.S. organization after
the director of Esai’s last orphanage fled the troubled Caribbean
country where gangs control 80% of the capital.
Nearly five months have passed since the last evacuation, and in that
time, Esai, who loves soccer and is mischievous, hasn’t been able to
talk to his adoptive mother in the U.S. or his two older brothers who
live with her as internet connections and other logistics falter.
“Clearly, this is an emergency,” said Michelle Reed, a 51-year-old
teacher and single mother who lives in Florida.
Reed's is one of 55 families from Tennessee to California asking the
U.S. government for humanitarian parole for some 70 children they’re
adopting. It was an opportunity the U.S. granted to more than a dozen
other children earlier this year when gangs attacked key government
infrastructure and forced Haiti’s main international airport to close
for nearly three months, prompting evacuations of dozens of U.S.
citizens and 39 children from March to May who had final adoption
decrees.
Reed and other families said they were initially told they would be part
of the evacuation group, but the U.S. government later said that
“despite intensive efforts,” it had not found a solution to allow
children without adoption decrees to leave Haiti and enter the U.S.,
according to a letter from the office of children’s issues at the State
Department.
“We understand that this update will be disappointing for both you and
your child(ren),” the office wrote.
Reed and other families warned that completing the adoption process in
Haiti instead of in the U.S. as requested forces the children to travel
to Port-au-Prince, which is largely under siege by gangs, to obtain a
visa, passport and medical exam.
“Why aren’t they doing that for our kids?” asked Emmerson, who lives in
the U.S. and requested that his last name be withheld for safety since
he and his wife, who are adopting his niece and nephew, have family in
Haiti.
Reed noted that the Haitian Central Adoption Authority has given the
families permission for the children to leave the country and complete
the adoption in the U.S.
But a State Department spokesperson told The Associated Press that other
Haitian authorities overseeing the adoption process do not agree. It
added that it’s working with the Haitian government “to move adoptions
forward as quickly as possible” while ensuring that laws, regulations
and obligations are met.
“The Department is working to expedite final processing steps for
additional children,” it said, adding that all Haitian government
offices that process adoptions are open, “although some offices could be
intermittently closed or operating at limited capacity due to localized
violence.”
The department said it “understands and empathizes with the concerns and
frustration of U.S. families adopting from Haiti.”
Stéphane Vincent, director of Haiti’s Directorate of Immigration and
Emigration, did not return messages for comment.
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security told the AP that consideration
for parole applies “to a very limited number of Haitians adoptees” who
have reached a specific stage in their process. It said that U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services “is working tirelessly” with U.S.
government partners “to navigate the current circumstances.”
Aside from the dangers of being in Port-au-Prince, families note their
cases could be further delayed because Haitian judges have been on
strike while others have left the country because of the violence.
The U.N. noted in a recent report that ever since Haiti’s judicial year
started in October 2023, “courts have been operational for barely ten
days.”
Backing the families in their push to obtain humanitarian parole are
lawmakers including U.S. Sens. Sherrod Brown, Marco Rubio and Rick
Scott, who have written the U.S. State Department and the Department of
Homeland Security on their behalf.
Haiti has been under a state of emergency for several months, and the
State Department has long upheld a “do not travel” advisory, warning of
kidnappings, killings, sexual assault and other crimes, adding that “the
U.S. government is very limited in its ability to help U.S. citizens in
Haiti.”
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Haitian children walk hand in hand as they await the arrival of
their adoptive parents in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Dec. 21, 2010. (AP
Photo/Ramon Espinosa, File)
From April to June, at least 1,379 people were reported killed or
injured, and another 428 kidnapped, according to the U.N., which
noted that 88% of those crimes were in Port-au-Prince.
Meanwhile, gang violence has left at least 700,000 people homeless
in recent years, half of them children, William O’Neill, the U.N.
independent human rights expert on Haiti, said Friday.
“All indicators remain extremely worrying,” he said during his visit
to Haiti. “The first and most concerning of them, insecurity.”
Meanwhile, Kenyan police who arrived in late June as part of a
U.N.-backed mission to help quell gang violence only recently
launched joint operations with Haiti’s police and military as the
U.S. ponders a U.N. peacekeeping operation after warning that the
current mission lacks resources.
“The children are at great risk,” said Diane Kunz, executive
director for the New York-based nonprofit Center for Adoption
Policy. “You have the State Department saying they can’t guarantee
the protection of their own people.”
In Florida, Reed worries about Esai as she tries to comfort his
brothers, ages 8 and 10, who were physically abused, sick and
malnourished when she adopted them nearly two years ago.
“The boys are afraid for him, and they don’t want to talk about it,”
she said, adding that no one told her they had a brother when she
adopted them.
Reed recalled how, after arriving in the U.S., her two older sons
slept in a single twin bed despite having two available and held
each other through the night.
“Nighttime was scary for them,” Reed said. “They had nightmares for
a long time.”
Fighting alongside Reed is Emmerson and his wife, Michelle, who also
asked that her name be withheld for safety.
Emmerson’s mother was in Haiti looking after his niece and nephew
when she had a heart attack after gangs raided their neighborhood,
located near where a young U.S. missionary couple was killed earlier
this year.
“They were shooting, and she passed away,” he said. “The kids were
traumatized.”
After speaking with his brother, who has health issues and struggles
to care for his five other children, they agreed adoption was best.
But Emmerson and Michelle have not been able to visit Haiti in
nearly a year given the ongoing violence.
Gangs forced the children to relocate to southwest Haiti, where
their family is running low on food and other basic supplies. Gunmen
control the main roads leading in and out of Port-au-Prince, on
occasion firing on those passing through.
The boy is 6 years old and extroverted, and his sister is “like a
little old lady in a 3-year-old’s body,” Michelle said. They worry
what will happen to them if they’re forced to travel to
Port-au-Prince to finalize the adoption, with Emmerson recalling how
his brother’s twins were kidnapped in the capital and later
released, with the boy’s face slashed by gangs.
“We just don’t want that for our kids,” he said.
Angela, who lives in California and asked that her last name be
withheld for safety, said she and her husband are trying to adopt a
5-year-old girl who — like Reed’s youngest son — has been evacuated
from orphanages three times.
Angela recalled how she was on the phone with an orphanage worker
and her daughter when gunfire erupted.
“Quite honestly, I didn’t know if she was going to be killed right
then and there,” she said. “Gunfire was penetrating the walls.”
She said it’s terrifying to think that her daughter, who is shy and
loves to read books, will have to travel to Port-au-Prince to
complete the required paperwork after violence forced her to flee
the city.
“It’s just not right for these children to be thrown into the war
zone to meet requirements that could easily be waived,” Reed said.
“We are not looking to bypass any part of the adoption process. We
want our children evacuated to safety so we have children to adopt.
We don’t want them to die in Haiti.”
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