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Save the Children Warns Against Risk of Trafficking of Children from Haiti


FAIRFIELD, Conn. – WEBWIRE
Save the Children Haiti field manager Carl-Henry Petit-Frère tours earthquake-affected areas in Les Cayes, Haiti in August 2021.
Save the Children Haiti field manager Carl-Henry Petit-Frère tours earthquake-affected areas in Les Cayes, Haiti in August 2021.

Save the Children is deeply concerned about the safety of children from children’s homes and children who have lost their parents in the recent earthquake in Haiti, as they are at risk of neglect, different forms of abuse, or even trafficking. 

An estimated 30 percent  of 48 children’s homes in the south of Haiti that care for about 1,700 children were damaged by the earthquake on Aug 14, according to reports, forcing children onto the streets and sleeping outside. Some children are now being cared for by foster families.

The 7.2 magnitude earthquake claimed around 2,200 lives with thousands more injured, and an unknown number of children likely losing their parents. In crises like these, unaccompanied children face a higher risk of abuse and neglect, Save the Children warned.  

Fabienne*, 24, lives in one of the children’s homes where she helps to care for other children. She goes to a nursing school and was inside the building when the earthquake happened:

“Because of the earthquake, we cannot go inside. We are sleeping outside, and looking at the house with no possibility to enter again. And also school has stopped, this is shocking.

“When it happened, we started to run and we ran all into each other. I was slightly injured and unfortunately when we got downstairs we saw dead bodies that were sent to funeral homes. Thank God the building didn’t fall.

“Life has changed in a way that I now feel traumatized. I am afraid that I don’t feel the aftershocks. I don’t want to go inside because I’m that stressed, that I don’t know whether to run or not.” 

Save the Children has been helping some of the impacted children’s homes with items like tarpaulin sheets, jerry cans and other basic goods, and is urging for extra protection for these already extremely vulnerable children. It also supported the reactivation of a coordinating group of organizations that work on protection.

“But more needs to be done urgently to keep them safe. We are worried about the risk of possible illegal adoption of vulnerable children from Haiti,” said Perpetue Vendredi, Save the Children’s deputy country director. “Hundreds of children were taken out of the country illegally after the 2010 earthquake by western organizations. That cannot happen again.”

After the earthquake of 2010 that claimed about 230,000 lives, children were illegally ‘adopted’ and taken to other countries with adoptions fast-tracked, although many children most likely still had at least one parent or other family. According to early estimations, between 1,000 and 2,000 children were taken out of Haiti in the first few months after the 2010 earthquake.

Vendredi continued:

“Often, children in children’s homes still have at least one parent, but families don’t have the means to take care of them. That’s a heart-breaking decision to make for any parent, and instead of taking these children even further away from them, we need to tackle the root causes of why children are brought to children’s homes—poverty, a lack of a future. Children who have lost their parents are far better off in their own communities, in foster families, or with extended family.” 

Children from children’s homes that were impacted by this month’s earthquake need extra protection, and the children’s homes need urgent support to ensure that they can shelter children in a child-friendly and safe way and help them to cope with their experiences, Save the Children said.

Save the Children emphasized that orphanages are always the last resort for children and it is far better to find families who can take care of children if they are really orphans, preferably extended family. 

Save the Children believes every child deserves a future. Since our founding more than 100 years ago, we’ve changed the lives of more than 1 billion children. In the United States and around the world, we give children a healthy start in life, the opportunity to learn and protection from harm. We do whatever it takes for children – every day and in times of crisis – transforming their lives and the future we share. Follow us on FacebookInstagramTwitter and YouTube.


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