Norway offers residence permits in exchange for children
source: http://45117.jp
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This from Pravda - so take with a grain of salt......
Norway offers residence permits in exchange for children. 45117.jpegIn accordance with the laws of Norway, any child, who lives in the country, is protected by the state. It is the state that can decide whether a child shall live with biological or foster parents. The decisions taken by local child protection services are more relevant that judges' decisions.
Another Russian citizen, who lives in Norway, has addressed to Pravda.Ru for help. The woman's name is Maya Kasayeva. One may say that her story is typical. The Norwegian authorities took the woman's child - a boy born in 2002. Originally, the authorities offered the woman an alternative.
"During the court hearings, the judge told me: 'We give you residence permit, and you give us your son.' I refused, and then the repressions started," Maya said.
The woman with her three other kids was accommodated in a refugee camp. She lost the right for work, and her children lost the right for education. Since Maya continued to fight for her son, the authorities simply decided to deport the woman from the country to get rid of the problem.
"I learned about it incidentally. The Russian immigration service contacted me to find out the place of my latest registration. When I asked them why they needed that information, they told me that they had the documents for my deportation from Norway," Maya said.
The woman asked how many of her children were listed in the documents. It turned out there were three. When the officers of the Russian immigration services were told that there were four children in Maya's family, they submitted a protest against the woman's deportation
More at: http://english.pravda.ru/society/stories/12-08-2011/118735-norway-0/
Norway offers residence permits in exchange for children. 45117.jpegIn accordance with the laws of Norway, any child, who lives in the country, is protected by the state. It is the state that can decide whether a child shall live with biological or foster parents. The decisions taken by local child protection services are more relevant that judges' decisions.
Another Russian citizen, who lives in Norway, has addressed to Pravda.Ru for help. The woman's name is Maya Kasayeva. One may say that her story is typical. The Norwegian authorities took the woman's child - a boy born in 2002. Originally, the authorities offered the woman an alternative.
"During the court hearings, the judge told me: 'We give you residence permit, and you give us your son.' I refused, and then the repressions started," Maya said.
The woman with her three other kids was accommodated in a refugee camp. She lost the right for work, and her children lost the right for education. Since Maya continued to fight for her son, the authorities simply decided to deport the woman from the country to get rid of the problem.
"I learned about it incidentally. The Russian immigration service contacted me to find out the place of my latest registration. When I asked them why they needed that information, they told me that they had the documents for my deportation from Norway," Maya said.
The woman asked how many of her children were listed in the documents. It turned out there were three. When the officers of the Russian immigration services were told that there were four children in Maya's family, they submitted a protest against the woman's deportation
More at: http://english.pravda.ru/society/stories/12-08-2011/118735-norway-0/
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