Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Passport rush stalls adoption process in Haiti

US policy change blamed for crush at government offices

- By Danica Coto

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Dozens of children are stuck in orphanages across Haiti, unable to leave the increasing­ly volatile country and start new lives with adoptive parents because a U.S. policy change has unleashed a rush for passports at Haiti’s main immigratio­n office.

President Joe Biden announced last month that the U.S. will accept 30,000 people a month from Haiti, Nicaragua, Cuba and Venezuela if they pass a background check and have an eligible sponsor and a passport to travel.

The ensuing demand for Haitian passports has overwhelme­d Haiti’s passport office in the capital, Portau-Prince, where people with appointmen­ts cannot squeeze through the aggressive crowd or secure new appointmen­ts.

Adoptive parents say the U.S. State Department has declined to grant passport waivers as they worry their children will succumb to hunger, cholera or gang violence.

“It’s infuriatin­g,” said Bryan Hanlon, a postal inspector who lives with his wife in Washington.

They became the legal parents of Peterson, 5, and Gina, 6, last year and fear they won’t be able to secure passports for the children and fly them out of Haiti, which has been in a downward spiral since the July 2021 assassinat­ion of President Jovenel Moïse.

Last year, the number of reported kidnapping­s in Haiti soared to 1,359, more than double the previous year, and 2,183 killings were reported, up by a third from 2021, according to the United Nations. Gangs also are raping women and children at an alarming rate, including those as young as

10, officials say.

Armed groups have attacked more than a dozen schools and set one on fire, and they also have killed one student and kidnapped at least two teachers, according to UNICEF statistics released Thursday.

Haiti also is fighting a deadly cholera outbreak and a spike in starvation.

Last year, 5-year-old Peterson became malnourish­ed and had to be taken to a clinic, where he was treated for a couple of months.

Then in October, the siblings had to flee the orphanage with a caretaker as gangs raided the neighborho­od, killing dozens of civilians and setting homes on fire. The violence that erupts as gangs fight over territory has left tens of thousands of Haitians homeless.

“That was the worst day of our lives,” Hanlon said. “We didn’t know if they were alive or dead.”

With their orphanage

abandoned because of the violence, the children had been taken by one of their caretakers to her home in southern Haiti, where they have remained, he said.

Hanlon said he and his wife send money to the caretaker, but that “some days, there is just no food to buy or no fuel to cook it.”

Other times, she cannot leave the house to pick up the money because it’s too dangerous, he said.

Brooke Baeth, an elementary school speech therapist in Minnesota, understand­s the fear and frustratio­n. She and her husband became the legal parents of a 5-year-old girl in Haiti nearly a year ago, but they don’t know when they will be able to meet her.

In late January, her daughter and caretakers flew from their orphanage in northern Haiti to Port-auPrince only to encounter a huge crowd at the immigratio­n office. Despite having an appointmen­t, they could not get inside, nor could some of

the office’s own employees, Baeth said.

“It’s just devastatin­g,” she said, adding that like the Hanlons, they haven’t been able to obtain a passport waiver from the State Department. “It feels like our voices are not being heard.”

A spokespers­on for the State Department said intercount­ry adoption is one of the agency’s highest priorities and that it uses all appropriat­e tools to identify and overcome barriers.

“We understand that it is currently difficult for prospectiv­e adoptive parents to obtain a Haitian passport,” the spokespers­on said. “We remain committed to helping prospectiv­e adoptive parents navigate the often-complicate­d journey of intercount­ry adoption. We will continue to engage with the Haitian government on this issue.”

Hanlon noted they are the legal parents of Gina and Peterson, not prospectiv­e

adoptive parents.

He shared email messages with The Associated Press in which the U.S. government denied his request for a waiver by noting that both Haiti’s immigratio­n office and the Ministry of the Interior were open for business, and that passport waivers are for use only on a case-bycase basis and as a last resort.

Ryan Hanlon, president and CEO of the U.S. National Council for Adoption who is not related to Bryan Hanlon, said in a phone interview that the State Department’s manual calls on officials to prioritize adoption cases.

“Can we even say we prioritize adoption when we have legal options that we choose not to utilize?” he said. “It’s the safety of the children that’s the concern here.”

Given the ongoing crush at Haiti’s main immigratio­n office, government officials recently opened two makeshift offices in a gymnasium and a soccer field elsewhere in Port-au-Prince. They also implemente­d a schedule setting aside specific days for groups including women and the elderly. Saturdays have been reserved for children.

Officials say they don’t know how many Haitian children are in this situation, but two of 11 U.S. agencies that are main providers of adoption services in Haiti say a dozen or more of their children are affected and the number has been rising. From 2016 to 2020, people adopted 827 children from Haiti, according to the most recent statistics from the State Department.

At one adoption agency, Colorado-based A Love Beyond Borders, at least 13 children in Haiti have been adopted but have been unable to obtain passports amid a processing backlog that is growing every day, said Stephanie Thoet, the agency’s Haiti program coordinato­r.

She noted that even Haiti’s Ministry of the Interior has been unable to access the passport office to manually deliver the files of adopted children and worries about officials being killed or kidnapped by gangs as they travel back and forth with paperwork that has taken years to complete.

At another agency, Utahbased Wasatch Internatio­nal Adoption, at least a dozen children who already have been adopted can’t obtain a passport, and the number is growing, said Chareyl Moyes, the agency’s Haiti program manager.

“The situation is dire,” she said, adding that she worries about a child or caretaker being killed. “Do we want to wait until it’s at that point?”

Baeth said it’s hard for her daughter to understand why it’s taking so long to be together. They tell her how much she means to them and send her images of snow. The girl, who wants to be a unicorn rider when she grows up, has sent them videos of her doing cartwheels and somersault­s.

 ?? CLIFF OWEN/AP ?? Bryan and Julie Hanlon show images of their adopted Haitian children, Gina, left, and Peterson last week in a play area at their home in Washington. They fear they won’t be able to secure the children’s passports and fly them out of Haiti.
CLIFF OWEN/AP Bryan and Julie Hanlon show images of their adopted Haitian children, Gina, left, and Peterson last week in a play area at their home in Washington. They fear they won’t be able to secure the children’s passports and fly them out of Haiti.

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