PM Tariceanu: "Protectia copilului este o prioritate pentru Guvernul
Romaniei. Interesul superior al copilului primeaza in raport cu toate
celelalte interese." ( <http://www.gov.ro/presa/afis-doc.php?idpresa=48027>
http://www.gov.ro/presa/afis-doc.php?idpresa=48027)
 
[...] Care may be more friendly now, but critics say bureaucracy, corruption
and ineptitude hobble reforms, while many children still have no state
protection.  Small children dot Bucharest's busiest intersections during
midday traffic, dodging cars to beg for cash. Others huddle along the
capital's underground passageways, sniffing glue.
 
PM Tariceanu: "Prevenirea abandonului copiilor, prin asigurarea conditiilor
de crestere a acestora in familiile din care provin, reprezinta o
necesitate." ( <http://www.gov.ro/presa/afis-doc.php?idpresa=51324>
http://www.gov.ro/presa/afis-doc.php?idpresa=51324)
 
[...] a generation of children is growing up without proper family support.
Already, the number of years Romanian children spend in school is among the
lowest in the EU, according to Eurostat figures.
 
In anul 2000, la initiativa baronesei Emma Nicholson, cu sprijinul Uniunii
Europene,  a fost creat Grupul la Nivel Inalt pentru Copiii Romaniei. Grupul
coordoneaza activitatile si masurile intreprinse pentru imbunatatirea
nivelului de educatie, pentru protectia si sanatatea copiilor [...]
Co-presedintii Grupului sunt premierul Calin Popescu-Tariceanu si Baroneasa
Nicholson. (http://www.gov.ro/presa/afis-doc.php?idpresa=44299)
 
No more comments...
 
----------------------------
 
Vali
"Noble blood is an accident of fortune; noble actions are the chief mark of
greatness." (Carlo Goldoni)
"When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know
peace." (Jimi Hendrix)
Aboneaza-te la  <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ngo_list: o
alternativa moderata (un pic) la [ngolist]
Please consider the environment - do you really need to print this email?
 
 
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20071224/lf_nm/romania_children_dc
 
Reuters: Migrant Romanian workers leave children at home 

By Justyna Pawlak | Mon Dec 24, 3:08 AM ET

A Romanian child, left home alone by his parents working in Western Europe,
looks through a wooden fence in a village near Bucharest in this October 10,
2007 file picture.(Mihai Barbu/Reuters)

BALACIU, Romania (Reuters) - Desperate parents are fleeing the poverty of
Romania's countryside in search of work elsewhere in the European Union,
leaving their children behind to be cared for by others.

Since Romania joined the EU at the start of 2007, thousands of children have
been left with grandparents, neighbors or local authorities while their
parents seek work, often illegally, on Italian construction sites or in
Spanish orchards.

"The phenomenon is on the rise since Romania joined the EU, opening doors to
free travel across borders in western Europe," said Mariela Neagu who runs
the state child protection agency.

"The parents see it as a sacrifice for their children, to give them a better
future."

In some schools, more than half the students live without either or both
parents. Many villages in northern and eastern Romania appear to be
inhabited only by children and their grandparents.

Official figures show 80,000 of more than 4 million Romanian children have
one parent or both parents working abroad. Social workers and volunteers say
the real number is much higher.

Bogdan Lacatus was seven years old when his father went to Spain to find
work and 11 when his mother left their village in southern Romania to follow
him.

A thin boy with large brown eyes and a soft voice, he now lives in a state
child care facility, waiting for his parents to claim him or for social
workers to find him a foster family.

"I think they will come back," he said softly.

He may have to wait a long time, according to social workers who are unable
to locate either of his parents. Bogdan's mother returned to Romania briefly
but disappeared after a few days.

At his great-aunt's farmhouse, where he stayed briefly before being moved
into care, ducks and chickens picked through the dusty yard littered with
rusting metal and rotting fruit.

Distant relatives have fought to be able to care for Bogdan and his two
younger siblings since their mother left Romania months ago. Social workers
say they are safer in state care where they avoid harsh treatment and
poverty.

"Parents have to notify us when they leave children behind and the local
authority monitors them," said Nicolae Badea of the social protection
authority monitoring Bogdan's case. "If there are problems, we take them
into care."

DICTATORSHIP AND CORRUPTION

In some ways, Bogdan is lucky. He is likely to avoid being placed in one of
the vast, dirty orphanages that caught the world's attention in the early
1990s, which have virtually disappeared in Romania.

However, the relatively poor state has just started overhauling its child
care, crippled and corrupted by years of dictatorship and the graft-tainted
society it spawned.

Care may be more friendly now, but critics say bureaucracy, corruption and
ineptitude hobble reforms, while many children still have no state
protection.

Small children dot Bucharest's busiest intersections during midday traffic,
dodging cars to beg for cash. Others huddle along the capital's underground
passageways, sniffing glue. 


The migration problem is not unique to Romania, plaguing several other poor
EU members in eastern Europe. 


Romania has asked Spain and Italy, the main destinations of Romanians
looking for work, to set up pilot language programs in schools in the hope
of making it easier for children to integrate and encouraging parents to
take them along. 


Bogdan's is a typical southern Romanian village which relies on corn and
sunflower cultivation for its livelihood, and is struggling to survive in
increasingly competitive markets. 


Its small school, on a dirt road and surrounded by fruit trees tended by the
children, teaches pupils French and English. 


"These children are not fed right, not dressed right. They are sensible and
sweet but they would do better if their parents were around," said Mariana
Mirea, Bogdan's teacher. 


Labor migration is an essential part of the Romanian economy, with 2 million
Romanians, or one in 10, living abroad since the fall of communism in 1989. 


Official figures show the outflow of legal workers has steadied in recent
years, but anecdotal evidence shows illegal migration is still high. 


The cash the migrants send home has helped rejuvenate parts of the
countryside but has depleted the workforce and forced up wages which
economists say may deter foreign investment. 


Researchers say a generation of children is growing up without proper family
support. Already, the number of years Romanian children spend in school is
among the lowest in the EU, according to Eurostat figures. 


Filanda, a mother of three who does odd jobs in Milan with her husband, said
she could not afford to take her children when she went to Italy in January
in search of work. 


"They are my children and I am upset," she said, declining to give her full
name. "There was no hope in Romania. There is a bit of hope here." 


(Additional reporting by Iulia Rosca in Bucharest and Marie-Louise Gumuchian
in Milan; editing by Janet Lawrence)

Copyright C 2007 Reuters Limited

Raspunde prin e-mail lui