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SDAPRC representatives will not meet with prospective adopting parents who arrive in Ukraine without an appointment or on a day other than when they are scheduled for an appointment. For the full list of required documents please click here.
The
SDAPRC, the central adoption authority in Ukraine, maintains the database
of adoptable children available for both domestic and intercountry
adoptions, and will help you meet and identify an eligible child to adopt.
If you are eligible to adopt, and the SDAPRC approves your application,
you will receive an appointment (invitation) to visit the SDAPRC. At this appointment SDAPRC
officials will show you information about orphans eligible for
intercountry adoption, and issue a letter of referral to allow you to
visit an orphanage to meet and establish contact with a child, and check
his or her medical records. As
of December 1, 2008 the SDAPRC will allow only three appointments to each
adoptive family to look at the children’s files. If you have not chosen a
child after the third appointment, your adoption dossier will be returned
to you immediately. You will need to submit a notarized statement to
request a second/third appointment with your dossier to the SDAPRC and
then they officially have ten business days to respond with the date of
your second/third appointment. The SDAPRC also limits the number of
adoption referrals issued to each family to two referrals. Each family must decide for itself whether or not it will be
able to meet the needs of a particular child and provide a permanent
family placement for the referred child.
While
meeting a child at the orphanage, you will be shown his/her medical
history. If any doubts arise, or if you would like to get more details on
the child's health condition, you may request an additional medical
check-up of the child (including blood tests etc.). According to the law,
every prospective parent has the right for additional pre-adoption medical
examination of the child conducted by a private physician in the presence
of the orphanage staff member. The
panel physicians of the Clinic of Oil Industry of Ukraine in Kyiv have
expressed their readiness to perform pre-adoption medical examinations.
Please check with them directly on their services and
fees. Parents should make every effort to thoroughly understand the medical conditions diagnosed by local physicians. Please be sure the facilitator and/or interpreter you hire are competent to translate and explain complex medical diagnoses. Knowledge of the child's medical conditions is required for the I-604 interview at U.S. Embassy in Kyiv. Parents should verify that medical reports from the orphanage are thorough and reflect all information provided to the Ukrainian court for the hearing. After
prospective adopting parents identify a child for adoption, the file for
the case is presented to a judge in the region where the child lives. The
power to approve or deny an adoption remains solely with an individual
judge. The judge's decision, in turn, is based on a review of various
documents of each individual adoption case during the court
hearing. As
a general rule, the judge's decision is announced and issued the day of
the hearing. However, it does not take effect for ten days. During the
ten-day period, the adoption can be appealed, which the Embassy
understands is rare. If an application for appeal is submitted to the
court within ten days after the court hearing, an additional period of 20
days is added for filing the actual appeal case with all the supporting
documents with the court. The waivers of appeal period are rarely granted
in cases when there is clear evidence that a delay in executing the court
decision is not in the best interest of the child (for example, damage to
health). Once
the decision takes effect, the new adopting parents are granted parental
rights and legal responsibility for the child. Adopting parents must attend the hearing. In cases where one of the parents cannot be present at the hearing (e.g. major surgery, disability etc.), a judge may permit one parent to provide a power of attorney for the other parent.
OBTAINING THE POST-ADOPTION BIRTH CERTIFICATE AND A TRAVEL
DOCUMENT The
local RAGS office (Ukrainian abbreviation for Office of Vital Records)
issues a post-adoption certificate of birth for an adopted child based on
the final court decree and the original (pre-adoption) birth certificate.
The pre-adoption birth certificate is not be returned to the adopting
parents, so parents should make sure that they make a copy of the
pre-adoption birth certificate before handing it over to the RAGS
authorities. Adopting
parents should make sure that there are no discrepancies in the spelling
of names of the parents and children in the court decree. If noticed,
please ask the court clerk to correct them immediately. Failure to do so
may cause delays in issuing the post-adoption birth certificate and in
authenticating Ukrainian documents. Once
the post-adoption birth certificate is obtained, parents may apply for a
passport for their child at the local VVIR (Ukrainian abbreviation for
Office of Visas and Registration). Parents are required to present a
written and notarized statement requesting that the travel document be
issued. The post-adoption birth certificate, final court decree, and 4
passport-size photos of the child have to be submitted along with the
statement. The new name of the adopted child in the travel document is
spelled in English transliterated from Ukrainian, so it may look different
from what appears on the parents' passport. There is no need for concern
as long as the child's name in Ukrainian on the travel document is the
same as in the court decree. However, parents can request that the correct
English spelling be noted on the blank page in the
passport. At the time the passport is issued, a special, mandatory stamp is put in it showing that the child is departing Ukraine for permanent residence abroad. It is called a "PMZh-stamp" for the words "permanent residence" in Ukrainian. Although under Ukrainian law immigration authorities have up to ten working days to issue passports for adopted children, they are often issued earlier, especially if the child requires medical care. |
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