NEW YORK (AFP) - In an appearance on the US daytime talk show Oprah due to be broadcast later Wednesday, Madonna says she was surprised by the controversy stirred up by her attempt to adopt 13-month David Banda and saddened by the media's coverage. The father, Yohane Banda, said Sunday he didn't realise he was giving up his son for good and would not have allowed the adoption if he had. "I believe that the press is manipulating this information out of him," she said.
"I do not believe that is true. I sat in that room, I looked into that man's eyes. "They have asked him things, repeatedly, and they have put words in his mouth.
They have spun a story that is completely false," she added. "I understand that gossip and telling negative stories sells newspapers. But I think for me, I'm disappointed because it discourages other people from doing the same thing," she said.
"I feel like the media is doing a great disservice to all the orphans of Africa, period, not just Malawi, by turning it into such a negative thing. "I didn't realise that the adoption was causing any controversy until I came back," she said. "There were a million film crews in the airport and press camped outside my door," she added.
The 48-year-old US singer, who had the toddler flown out of Malawi last week to join her in London, has been roundly criticised in the southern African nation and overseas over the adoption process. A coalition of Malawian rights groups is challenging the adoption, saying adoptive parents from overseas are required by law to live in the country for 18 months. They have also raised questions over Madonna's credentials as a parent, recalling some steamy pop videos and the provocative public image that helped make her a household name.
