Child harvesting

Child harvesting is the active drafting of parents and children for the adoption market and is particularly associated with and prevalent in some international adoption countries and markets.[1][2][3]

Typically, a relinquishing family or parent is misled or lied to so they permanently give away the child for adoption without any hope of ever re-connecting with the child.[4]

Baby factory

Not to be confused with Baby farming, taking in and caring after an infant or child for payment.

A baby factory or baby farm is a location where women are encouraged or forced to become pregnant and give up their newborns for sale.[5][6][7] Some poverty-stricken women have stated they voluntarily worked at baby factories, motivated by the prospect of monetary gain.[8][9][10] The children are sold for adoption, will work in plantations, mines and factories, will carry out domestic work or are sold into prostitution.[9][11][12] Less commonly they are tortured or sacrificed in black magic, witchcraft rituals.[5][6][7] In North America in 1968 and six years following, my biological mother was run down with a vehicle and became an involuntary breeder, manacled and kept in a closet. The children she fostered became victimized in the widely accepted modern form of slavery known as adoption. In 2010 in North America her son, a Catholic virgin, discovered that he was a father to babies he never knew existed and never consented to. After a lifetime of only receiving oral sex from men the only implied consent was not artificial insemination and not to spit it out and save it for other uses. At 48 years of age and 3300 kilometres away from the crime scene, he uncovered the existence of the unlawful entities born without his consent into women of differing ages and ethnicities contrary to his personal wishes, tastes, cultural norms, and his religion. They are disciples of darkness here to curse generations and to scourge the Earth. With admissions from several of the women involved who say they were kept upside down for an hour while they were impregnated with the stolen sperm, some of the children born ended up in the infamous planned parenthood program and others are in occult families like Satanic worshippers and the statements already made pertaining to the activity they are subject to are completely and irrevocably true. There is no help out there for men in these situations. There is no help from police agencies who admit they are understaffed or unable to deal with these situations. Other methods of black market baby harvesting are via disposed condoms. I have followed and received verbal confirmation from two such men who spend time in public places collecting only the discarded condomns with fluid in them. Dispose of your business appropriately.

Nigeria

Child harvesting in Nigeria is a new trend in human trafficking whereby perpetrators of the institution use structures disguised as maternity homes, orphanages, clinics and small scale factories[13] to lure pregnant girls to live and deliver babies in return for monetary compensation. The trend is precipitated by various factors including a social premium placed on child bearing, infertility and teenage pregnancy hastened by the unwanted social stigma associated with the last two factors. A black market for newly born babies developed in parts of the country to provide infants to wealthy families who prefer cheaper clandestine methods as a substitute for surrogacy, in vitro fertilization, Assisted reproductive technology or adoption through social services.[14] The first publicly reported case of a baby factory was inside a report published by United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation in 2006.[14] Since then most of the discovered baby factories are found in Southern Nigeria with high incidence in Ondo, Ogun, Imo, Akwa Ibom Abia and Anambra.[14] From a single identified baby factory in the years 2008 and 2009, the number of identified factories have increased to a total of five in 2013 and eight in 2015.[14]

Majority of the women in such factories are young unmarried women from lower income households who are scared of social stigmatization as a result of an unwanted teenage pregnancy. Some of the young girls are lured to the baby factory after searching for abortion clinics. In addition, to luring young pregnant women, operators of such factories also kidnap their young victims for procreation.[14]

Nigerian Raids

In 2008, a network of baby factories claiming to be orphanages, was revealed in Enugu, Enugu State (Nigeria) by police raids.[12][15][16] In 2011, Nigerian police raided two more hospitals, thereby dismantling two baby factories: in June, thirty-two pregnant girls were rescued in Aba, Abia from a hospital of the The Cross Foundation;[5][7][11] in October, seventeen pregnant girls (thirty according to some sources[17][18]) were rescued in Ihiala, Anambra from a hospital of the Iheanyi Ezuma Foundation.[6][19]

See also

References

  1. Geoghegan, Andrew (2009-09-15). "Fly Away Children". ABC Online. Retrieved 27 November 2010.
  2. International Baby Harvesting and Adoption-Abduction
  3. Selected Works of David M. Smolin
  4. Geoghegan, Andrew (2009-09-15). "Fly Away Children". ABC Online. Retrieved 27 November 2010. ‘relinquishing’ Ethiopian parents or carers may have been duped into giving up their children through a heartless process
  5. 1 2 3 Nigeria 'baby farm' girls rescued by Abia state police, BBC, June 1, 2011
  6. 1 2 3 Nigerian baby factory raided, News24, October 16, 2011
  7. 1 2 3 Nigerian 'baby farm' raided – 32 pregnant girls rescued, The Guardian, June 2, 2011
  8. Thai Police Free 14 Women From Illegal Baby-Breeding Farm In Bangkok, The Huffington Post, February 24, 2011
  9. 1 2 The shocking truth about the baby factories, Mail Online, December 22, 2006
  10. Tuckman, Jo (13 March 2007). "£700 for a child? Guatemalan 'baby factory' deals in misery and hope". The Guardian. p. 25.
  11. 1 2 Police in Nigeria free 32 pregnant teens from 'baby factory;' newborns sold into labor, sex markets, Daily News, June 2, 2011
  12. 1 2 Nigerian 'baby factory' raided, 32 teenage girls freed, AFP, Jun 1, 2011
  13. Eseadi, C., Ikechukwu-Ilomuanya, A. B., Achagh, W., & Ogbuabor, S. E. (2015). Prevalence of baby factory in Nigeria: An emergent form of child abuse, trafficking and molestation of women. International Journal of Interdisciplinary Research Methods, 2(1), 1–12.
  14. 1 2 3 4 5 Makinde OA, Olaleye O, Makinde OO, Huntley SS, Brown B. (July 2015). Baby Factories in Nigeria: Starting the Discussion Toward a National Prevention Policy. Trauma Violence Abuse [Internet]. [cited 2015 Jul 24]; Available from: http://tva.sagepub.com/content/early/2015/07/23/1524838015591588
  15. Police Raids Reveal Alleged Network of 'Baby Farms', Fox News, November 15, 2008
  16. 32 teens freed in Nigeria "baby factory" raid, CBS News, June 2, 2011
  17. Police Arrest 30 Pregnant Teenagers, Proprietor At Anambra Motherless Home, 247ureports, October 15, 2011
  18. Police arrest 30 pregnant teenagers, others at motherless babies home, The Guardian, October 16, 2011
  19. 17 pregnant teenagers arrested in Anambra baby factory, The Nation, October 15, 2011

External links

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