Adoption is lawful: Madonna
Penny Ditch  |  by www.smh.com.au. All rights reserved. 24.11 | 18:22

boy from Malawi, releasing an open letter to explain her joy at bringing him to Britain.
The boy, David Banda, was whisked through London's Heathrow Airport by Madonna's aides after he flew from Lilongwe, Malawi's capital, to South Africa, in a private jet, from where he was flown first-class to London.
In a whir of activity, he was then apparently taken to Madonna's stately Victorian terrace houses, which was staked out by the Madonna insisted that, along with her husband Guy Ritchie, she had funded.


But the Human Rights Consultative Committee, an umbrella grouping of 67 local rights groups in Malawi, went to court the boy.
Under Malawian law, expatriates adopting a child usually have to workers before they get full adoption rights.
"We feel that the interim order was done in bad faith," Justin Dzodzi, a spokesman for the alliance, said in Blantyre, Malawi.


fast-tracking of the adoption process.
If the judge grants permission for a full hearing, their lawyers their own regulations by allowing David to join Madonna abroad.
she could use her wealth more effectively, such as helping African parents fight AIDS and keeping orphaned children, including the baby she is attempting to adopt, in their home communities.


In the letter released by Britain's Press Association, Madonna extreme life of hardship, poverty and in many cases death".
lightly."

learning that the country, one of the poorest in the world, was home to more than one million orphans.


other projects worth about $US5 million ($6.6 million) in Malawi, one of the world's poorest countries.
Charities, however, say she could use her fortune better than through her adoption of the Malawian baby boy.


Louise Richards, chief executive of international development charity War on Want, while acknowledging that Madonna's step their pledges to make poverty history."
Meanwhile, ActionAid's Jane Moyo expressed concerns about the international level."
In an interview with Britain's Mail on Sunday newspaper, the childbirth.

Read more on by www.smh.com.au. All rights reserved.
Related news
Post comments
Name
Place
2 + 9 =
Comments