A group of 33 Haitian children who have been adopted by French families left a school where they had sought shelter and headed to the Port-au-Prince airport.
Following the devastating earthquake, a group of 33 Haitian children who have been adopted by French families left a school where they had sought shelter and headed to the Port-au-Prince airport.
Aged between one and six years old, they boarded a bus for the airport, each with their hands set on the shoulders of the child in front of them, singing "the little train."French consul Jean-Pierre Gueguan told AFP the children would arrive in Paris on Friday evening to meet their adoptive parents.
All but one of them were good health, each child had a Haitian passport with the family name of their adoptive family but also their birth family's surname.
"It's very important that a child knows where he came from," one nurse said.
Some of the children were orphans, others were abandoned, but all were looking forward to a brighter future.
Several of the children had been living in a nursery that was severely damaged in last week's devastating earthquake, but "not a single child was injured and not a single adoption file was lost," Gueguan said.
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In the days since the January 12 quake, families around the world in the process of adopting Haitian children have pressured their governments to speed up the adoption process.
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THK