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Eradicatin­g ‘hell on earth’ for children

Alternativ­es to orphanages seen rising across globe

- By Alison Mutler, Gillian Wong and David Crary Associated Press

BUCHAREST, Romania — Soft toys on the beds and posters on the walls. No more than three children to a room. One of the girls living in the four-bedroom home gushes about getting makeup for her birthday.

In this group home on a leafy street in Bucharest, Romania’s orphanage nightmares seem far away.

The horror stories, along with images of hollow-eyed children lying in row upon row of dilapidate­d cribs, emerged quickly after the 1989 toppling of Communist dictator Nicolae Ceausescu: shocking accounts of thousands of children beaten, starved and humiliated in overcrowde­d, underfunde­d state-run orphanages.

“There was no heating, no windows, no bedding, no running water,” recalled Rupert Wolfe Murray, a British freelance journalist who accompanie­d an aid convoy that reached an institutio­n for disabled children soon after Ceausescu’s fall. In a single year in the 1980s, 30 children had died of cold, malnutriti­on and disease, according to records found at the orphanage, said Rupert, who joined the aid effort there after he saw the appalling conditions.

Today, the number of children in Romania’s orphanages has plummeted from more than 100,000 to about 7,000, with a goal of closing all the old-style facilities by 2023. Legions of children have been reunited with their families, placed in foster homes or relocated to family-style houses run by well-trained staff like the one in Bucharest’s 6th District.

Across the globe, intensive efforts are underway to get children out of orphanages. But it’s a goal that remains elusive in many other countries — in India, where privately run, poorly regulated orphanages abound, and in Nepal and Haiti, where unscrupulo­us orphanage operators sometimes pay parents to relinquish their children and then profit from donations from sympatheti­c foreigners.

But aid groups working to phase out orphanages believe momentum is on their side.

“We are almost at the brink of achieving a global movement — putting orphanages back into history books,” said Dr. Delia Pop, the Romanian director of global advocacy with Britain-based Hope and Homes for Children.

There’s no precise global tally of children living in orphanages. UNICEF’s latest estimate is 2.7 million, but the agency says many countries don’t accurately count children in privately run orphanages.

Whatever the type of facility, 80 to 90 percent of the children in them have at least one living parent, according to UNICEF.

“Most often it’s poverty driving these families apart,” said Shannon Senefeld of Catholic Relief Services. “Parents believe their child will be given a better way of life if they live in an orphanage.”

Yet research suggests orphanage life often harms a child in lasting ways. Even well-run institutio­ns generally lack the affectiona­te care that maximizes a child’s potential, while many expose children to abuse and exploitati­on.

Here’s a look at how orphanage reform is faring around the globe:

 ?? NG HAN GUAN/AP ?? A caretaker lifts a child with a cleft lip from a scale at a New Hope Foundation foster home near Beijing.
NG HAN GUAN/AP A caretaker lifts a child with a cleft lip from a scale at a New Hope Foundation foster home near Beijing.

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