Friday, May 24, 2013

Adoptantes Americanos con procesos de adopcion pendiente en Rusia

This week Senator Landrieu is circulating the below letter for signature by
members of Congress. The letter will go to President Obama and will urge him
to prioritize the matter of the pipeline families trapped by the Russian
adoption ban and find a solution when he meets with Putin at the G8 Summit
in mid-June.

The impacted families urgently need your help to support the matched
families on humanitarian grounds. We have support from the Senate and House
in 43 States but need your help. Please consider calling your Senators and
Reps in their DC office and urge them to sign the Landrieu Letter (Israel is
spearheading in the House). We need every State's support to get the
President to put our children who we have already met and we love on the
agenda when he meets with Putin in June.

You can see whether your senators and representatives have signed on here.
The right hand column will show names and phone numbers of those who have
not yet signed, listed by state.
House: http://tinyurl.com/pktvh6w
Senate: http://tinyurl.com/qa989p9

If you need a sample script when talking to your congresspeople:
http://tinyurl.com/ozdocmf

Senators and Reps who wish to sign should contact Whitney Reitz in Senator
Landrieu's office at 202-224-5824 or email her at
whitney_reitz@landrieu.senate.gov whitney_reitz @ landrieu.senate.gov 
The deadline for signing this letter is the end of business today, Friday,
May 24th.

Thank you for your commitment to support the 230 families and 300 kids who
are waiting to be united as families.

The text of the letter is below and here
http://tinyurl.com/ovaqkb6

President Barack H. Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, D.C. 20500
Dear Mr. President:

We are writing to request your assistance with finding a solution for the
small number of Russian orphans who have already met and bonded with their
American families, yet were not able to have their adoptions completed due
to the Russian adoption ban. We understand that you will be meeting with
President Putin in June during the G8 Summit. We ask that you prioritize
this issue and seek commitment from President Putin to finding a
humanitarian solution.

Politics between the United States and Russia have become personal to
several hundred Russian orphans and the families in the United States hoping
to adopt them. These are children without parents, families, or homes. Many
are in need of urgent medical care; all are in need of a future filled with
promise. These children have no voice. These children have already been
promised homes in America, and they have bonded with these American parents.
The Government of Russia's unwillingness to allow their cases to be
completed adds yet another trauma to their young lives.

We have met many of these families and spoken with them frequently. They
remain completely dedicated to these children, and they are trying
everything in their power to help them. Approximately 230 of these families
had traveled to Russia before the adoption ban to spend time with the
children with whom they were matched. These devoted families already think
of the children they were matched with as their sons and daughters.

Mr. President, we must find a humanitarian solution for these children and
these families. We were cautiously optimistic when the Government of Russia
sent a delegation to the United States a few weeks ago, but the outcome of
that visit was disappointing.

We ask you to raise this issue with President Putin directly in the hopes
that two world leaders can step back for a moment and find a way out of the
political morass for a few hundred wounded children. Based on the briefings
we have received from the Department of State and U.S. Citizenship and
Immigration Services, we know that there are options for bringing these
children home, despite the ban. The issue, then, becomes a question of
convincing the Russians to put the children's needs first. We thank you in
advance for your efforts on behalf of this group of children and families.

Sincerely,
Names of Congressional Members

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Presidente Putin firmo prohibicion de adoptar niños rusos a familias de USA

Todos esperabamos que el sentido comun se impusiera y el presidente Putin como ejecutivo del gobierno ruso tuviera un poco de sensates y no firmara esa ridicula ley que mezcla la politica con lo humanitario. Sin embargo otra vez mas gano la insensatez.  El dia 28 de Dciembre Putin firmo la ley pasada y aprobada por los miembros del parlamento ruso.
Miles de familias norteamericanas se veran afectadas por este cambio y el caos economico que va a provocar tendra consecuencias que como simepre recaeran en las familias y en los niños y en poco afectaran a los politicos.
Esta nueva ley entro en efecto el 1 de enero de 2013 pero todavia nadie sabe como se implementara.
Las autoridades norteamericanas recomiendan a las familias asesorarse y averiguar en que forma les va a afectar este cambio.
Aqui les adjuntamos la noticia tal como fue publicada por RainbowKids:

"On December 28, President Vladimir Putin signed into law Russian Federal Law No. 186614-6, which prohibits the adoption of Russian children by U.S. citizens. This law will go into effect on January 1, 2013. In keeping with the spirit of the current U.S.-Russia adoption agreement, which went into effect on November 1, 2012, the U.S. government continues to urge the Russian government to allow U.S. families in the process of adopting a child from Russia to complete their adoptions so that these children may join permanent, loving families.
At this time the Russian government has provided no details on how the law will be implemented. The Department of State has no information on whether the Russian government intends to permit the completion of any pending adoptions.
In observance of national holidays, most Russian government offices will be closed through January 8, 2013.
 Prior to traveling to Russia, we strongly encourage families, in cooperation with their adoption service providers, to confirm that Russian authorities will process their adoptions to conclusion and provide all required documents. It remains unclear whether Russian immigration authorities will allow adoptees to depart the country and whether families in this situation will encounter legal complications with local authorities starting on January 1, 2013.
 The U.S. Embassy in Moscow will continue to process Forms I-600, Petition to Classify Orphan as an Immediate Relative, and immigrant visa applications for children whose families have obtained all required documents as part of the adoption process. U.S. citizen adoptive parents who have completed an adoption, received a Russian passport for their child, and have filed or are ready to file Form I-600 with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), and then apply for the immigrant visa at the consular section of the U.S. Embassy in Moscow should call +7-495-728-5000 or email the USCIS office at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow at Moscow.dhs@dhs.gov to request assistance."

Kryst
Angels Faces org