Wednesday, November 11, 2020

"In a hidden corner of the EU, defenceless children are suffering unimaginable cruelty", news article in Independent, from November 16, 2007

Source:

In a hidden corner of the EU, defenceless children are suffering unimaginable cruelty, article by Dominic Lawson, dated 16 November 2007, Independent


The article:

In a hidden corner of the EU, defenceless children are suffering unimaginable cruelty
By Dominic Lawson
Friday 16 November 2007

Tonight the BBC broadcasts the annual appeal for Children in Need. It's a cause few of us can be unaware of: last year the show raised over £18m for British children in a single evening. This Sunday, however, BBC2 is to broadcast a programme which reveals children completely forgotten not just by the outside world, but by their own country, where they have been systematically neglected and fatally malnourished. This country is not in Africa. It is in the European Union, allegedly the most civilised body of nations that has ever existed.

Bulgaria's Abandoned Children is a one-and-a-half-hour long documentary directed by the extraordinary Kate Blewett, who 11 years ago brought the world's attention to some of the horrifying consequences of China's one-child programme with the film The Dying Rooms. Now she has turned her unflinching directorial eye to the treatment of disabled children in Bulgaria, having spent nine months in an institution for such unwanted infants in the remote village of Mogilino.

Kate Blewett tells me that she found this experience even more distressing than what she witnessed in China. Having watched her film, I can understand why. We see the children effectively incarcerated, locked up and left alone at night. There is a playground outside, but it is unused, full of rust and weeds. The inmates are fed disgusting, colourless slop, unrecognisable as food. As a result, those least able to fend for themselves are emaciated to such an extent that they resemble skeletons more than humans. Before they die, their bones begin to break.

Kate Blewett films one child, Vasky, visibly wasting away, whose leg is clearly broken: she is screaming in agony. A member of staff treats this by rubbing powder into the disfigured leg, which only causes Vasky to howl even louder. “Can't you see her leg is broken?" Blewett tells the white-coated “nurse”, through a translator. “It's her disease”, says the unmoved assistant. In fact Vasky entered Mogilino with only one thing the matter with her: she was born blind.

That is true of a large number of the 75 children in Mogilino. Many of them were not severely disabled when they entered the institution, but, completely starved of any form of stimulation, let alone education, they have become profoundly disturbed — with the inevitable result that some of the stronger children begin to attack the weaker ones.

Perhaps the most affecting case is that of Didi, an almost beautiful teenage girl who has been abandoned by her mother. When we first encounter Didi, she presents as someone on the mild end of the autistic spectrum. She protests that she does not belong in a place like Mogilino. We see her writing endless letters to her mother, asking to be let back home. The letters are never delivered. The staff know that the mother does not want to deal with Didi ever again — and indeed, she chose Mogilino because it was the institution furthest from her own home. By the end of the film the formerly articulate and bright-eyed Didi spends her days rocking backwards and forwards, silently, like most of the other children — those, that is, who are not tied down “to protect themselves.”

You might wonder why the institution was content to let Kate Blewett in with her film crew, given the terrible sights which lay in store. As she says: “Most of the staff were fairly welcoming, and showed no shame for the way the children's bodies and limbs were wasting away. It was as if all was fine. This was something I witnessed in China when making The Dying Rooms — the staff were not embarrassed to let us film dying children, as it seemed the norm.”

The Director of Mogilino, admittedly, does come across as a cold and selfish character: when finally confronted by Blewett, she complains that none of it is her fault: the staff, she complains, “have let me down.” While it is true that the evident plumpness of all the nursing assistants somehow seems disgusting when set against the malnutrition of the children — presumably that's how the food budget gets allocated — they do not seem to be cruel people. Like guards in a concentration camp, they probably go back to their own children at the end of the working day and treat them with love and kindness. They have convinced themselves that the disabled children in the institution are somehow not human at all.

Perhaps the same could have been said of many such institutions in this country 100 years ago — or perhaps more recently than that; and, just as used to be the case here, when children are born with disabilities in Bulgaria the parents are invariably told they would be best advised to abandon their new-born — to forget about them, in fact. That, presumably, is why Bulgaria has more children in such institutions than any other country in Europe.

The Bulgarian government has reacted to Kate Blewett's investigation in the way you might expect — with a mixture of denial and fury: which is to say, shame. One of its functionaries, Christo Monev, declared that “the film was made because of the policy of the British Government who are against Bulgarian immigrants”. Mr. Monev went on to say that he could make a film about the English showing “drunken men and nymphomaniac women”. He concluded that “Bulgaria does not need English nannies to come and tell us what to do”.

Underneath this bluster we can sense the deep embarrassment of the Bulgarian government. They were understandably very proud of the fact that this year their country became a full member of the EU, nothing less than a formal acknowledgement that they had joined the elite of European nations. Britons are flooding into Bulgaria, spending lavishly on skiing trips and holiday homes. Kate Blewett's film — a glimpse of something altogether darker — was not in this script at all.

What does the European Commission think of all this? In response to a complaint about Bulgaria prompted by Kate Blewett, the head of its Health and Consumer Protection Directorate spoke out, as follows: “It is hoped that an EU patient safety network will be established in 2008, to take forward work to reduce unsafe care in response to patient safety issues common to all Member States.” This classic piece of EU-speak was doubtless informed by the official Bulgarian government response: “The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child and the Bulgarian Child Protection Act guarantee the compliance of institutions with the requirements to observe the rights of children and regulate the state commitment to guarantee the children's ultimate interests, inclusive of delivering high quality care.”

I have never heard a better example of Orwell's observation that “political language is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable.”

“Bulgaria's Abandoned Children” is at 10pm on Sunday on BBC2.

"Documentary Exposes Horrors of Bulgarian Children's Home", news article in Balkan Insight, from September 14, 2007

Source:

Documentary Exposes Horrors of Bulgarian Children's Home, dated 14 September 2007, Balkan Insight


The article:

Documentary Exposes Horrors of Bulgarian Children's Home
BIRN
September 14, 2007

London — The British media gave extensive coverage on Friday to a ground-breaking BBC 4 documentary on the appalling conditions in an institution for deaf or blind children in Bulgaria.

Shock was the overwhelming response from newspapers and public alike at the desperate conditions and institutionalised cruelty shown to vulnerable and in some cases desperately ill children by staff and management at Mogilino in northern Bulgaria.

The programme, “Bulgaria's Abandoned Children”, by Kate Blewett, well known for the programme “The Dying Rooms” about orphanages in China and for exposing similar conditions in Romanian orphanages in the early 1990s, followed events at Mogilino for nine months.

During the programme, children were shown wasting away over a period of months from malnutrition and being left on beds in exquisite pain with broken limbs. Evidence of the routine physical abuse of at least two children by one staff member, subsequently removed, was uncovered.

Photographic evidence of the often relatively healthy state of the children when they arrived, and their massive deterioration under the “care” of the Bulgarian nurses, was provided.

At the end of the programme, at least two of the children tracked over the period of filming appeared close to death, mainly as a result of neglect. The institution's director, however, was shown praising her work and blaming any problems at the institution on negligent staff.

In a written reply, also shown at the end of the programme, the Bulgarian government rebutted all the programme-makers' claims concerning the ill-treatment of children in institutions in Bulgaria.

The programme was “90 minutes of undiluted horror”, Britain's Daily Telegraph remarked. “Anyone familiar with the Romanian orphanage scandals of the early Nineties will have stared in shocked disbelief that nearly 20 years on precisely the same pattern of appalling cruelty and neglect is being repeated in another former Communist state. The chief difference is that Bulgaria is already a member of the European Union.”

"Greece's Horrifying Conditions at Children's Care Center", article in Greek Reporter, from February 17, 2011

Source:

Greece's Horrifying Conditions at Children's Care Center, article by Polina Dimea, dated 17 February 2011, Greek Reporter


The article:

Greece's Horrifying Conditions at Children's Care Center
By Polina Dimea - Feb 17, 2011

For more than twenty years young children and teenagers have been tortured, abused and died in the “hell” of Child Care Center (KEPEP) in Lechaina, Peleponnese.

Innocent lives spend their dull days tied up at their beds. Some are enclosed in real wooden cages equipped just with a mattress. Children with physical or mental problems just eat and vegetate. A report by a British physiotherapist, who offered voluntary work from July to December 2009, unveiled the drama of the children and the Middles [sic] Ages conditions.

Those children are forgotten by the social services and even their parents. Some of the children are autistic or have impaired vision. However, there are some that are aware and can well understand. When forced to live in these conditions, they often hit their heads against the wall or uproot their hair (an indication of serious psychological trauma in children).

The rooms have no colours, toys and incentives for improvement and creativity. “Every day the caretakers change the diapers of all children without any privacy. Also showers, 3 times per week, take place collectively." No respect is shown to their fundamental rights; their private and social life is absolutely “shipwrecked”.

Furthermore, she points out the unwillingness and indifference of caretakers and medical experts to offer their help, the absence of financial means, physiologist and psychologist therapies in order to provide these children with even a minimum quality of life.

Last but not least, the psychotherapist wonders how it is possible for children with such problems to live in inhuman conditions in a European country at the dawn of the 21st century. They are human beings with needs and wishes.

Tuesday, November 10, 2020

"18 children from the home in Pleven died in a year and a half", news article in BTV News from April 19, 2012

Source:

18 деца от дома в Плевен починали за година и половина, dated 19 April 2012, BTV Новините (BTV Novinite)


The article:

18 деца от дома в Плевен починали за година и половина
Прокуратурата се е заела с резултатите на здравното министе[р]ство
19. 04. 2012 г.

Осемнадесет деца от дома за медико-социални грижи в Плевен са починали за година и половина, обяви министърът на здравеопазването Десислава Атанасова, която представи резултатите от внезапно проверка в дома на 6 април.

Открити са груби нарушения - в грамажа на даваната на децата храна, в съхранението на хранителни продукти - в едно помещение с белина и архивни документи.

По-малки порции, липса в менюто на мляко, сирене и кашкавал, всеки ден и риба веднъж седмично, са засекли още инспекторите.

„Самото меню в лечебното заведение не е съобразено със здравословните проблеми на децата, предлаганата храна не е разнообразна и пълноценна. Подкрепителната закуска, която би следвало да бъде в 10 ч. и би следвало да бъде само от пресни плодове се замества много често със захарни изделия или с крем нишесте", каза ръководителят на Инспектората на Министерството на здравеопазването.

В дома живеят 150 деца, за които се грижат 172 служители. Според проверяващите, за децата не са били полагани адекватни грижи. 60 от тях са с увреждания и точно при тях положението е най-тежко.

„Смесвали са се храни, както са потвърдили и от самите работещи. Първо, второ и трето от обедното меню и второ и трето от вечерното са давани на децата в шишета. Никаква грижа са изграждане на навици в самостоятелно хранене или хранене от страна на персонала с лъжица на тези деца", каза министър Атанасова.

Положението с даренията е още по-интересно. Оказало се, че децата са получили благотворително калмари и рибни филета, кафе-автомат, както и много играчки, които всъщност не са стигали до тях.

В същото време продукти и дарени предмети, за които имало документи, че са използвани стояли прибрани в канцелария на двама от служителите в дома.

Констатациите ще бъдат представени в Държавната финансова инспекция и в Главна инспекция по труда. Окръжна прокуратура в Плевен също се е заела с данните от проверката.

В края на миналата година директорката на дома е уволнена, но се оказва, че няколко дни по-късно тя кандидатства отново за работа и е назначена на друга длъжност. Според инспекторите, реално тя е продължила да управлява институцията.

Няма да бъдат настанявани още деца в този дом, каза Атанасова. Различни болници ще се заемат с лечението на повечето от децата, живеещи там в момента Министърът обеща проверки и в другите домове за медико-социални грижи за деца в страната.

Инспекцията дойде след изненадващата й проверка в дома, при която стана ясно, че има деца, които страдат от недохранване. 16-годишни младежи тежат едва 16 кг.

Проверката констатира и липса на пълна документация за даренията, които получава социалното заведение. Обект на проверката стана и хигиената в дома. Тогава ръководството на дома не се съгласи с обвиненията, че децата са недохранени или хигиената не отговаря на нормите.

Главният лекар на социалната институция обясни, че заболяванията на 16-годишните деца са причина за малкото им килограми и ниския ръст, а не се дължали на недохранване.

English translation:

18 children from the home in Pleven died in a year and a half
The prosecutor's office has dealt with the results of the Ministry of Health
April 19, 2012

Eighteen children from the medical and social care home in Pleven have died in a year and a half, announced the Minister of Health Desislava Atanasova, who presented the results of a sudden inspection at the home on April 6.

Gross violations were found — in the weight of the food given to the children, in the storage of food products — in a room with bleach and archival documents.

Smaller portions, lack of milk, cheese and kashkaval in the menu, every day and fish once a week, were also detected by inspectors.

"The menu itself in the medical institution is not consistent with the health problems of the children, the food offered is not varied and complete. The snack, which should be at 10 a.m. and should be only fresh fruit, is often replaced by confectionery or starch cream," said the head of the Inspectorate of the Ministry of Health.

There are 150 children living in the home, who are cared for by 172 employees. According to the inspectors, the children were not adequately cared for. 60 of them have disabilities and the situation is the worst in them.

"Food was mixed, as confirmed by the workers themselves. First, a second and third of the lunch menu and second and a third of the evening menu are given to the children in bottles. No care [is given] for building habits in self-feeding or eating with a spoon by the staff for these children," said Minister Atanasova.

The situation with donations is even more interesting. It turned out that the children received charity calamari and fish filets, a coffee machine, as well as many toys that did not actually reach them.

At the same time, products and donated items for which there were documents that were used were stored in the office of two of the employees in the home.

The findings will be presented to the State Financial Inspectorate and the General Labor Inspectorate. The Pleven District Prosecutor's Office also dealt with the data from the inspection.

At the end of last year, the director of the home was fired, but it turned out that a few days later she applied for a job again and was appointed to another position. According to the inspectors, she actually continued to run the institution.

No more children will be accommodated in this home, Atanasova said. Various hospitals will deal with the treatment of most of the children currently living there. The minister promised inspections in other homes for medical and social care for children in the country.

The inspection came after her surprise home inspection, which revealed that there were children suffering from malnutrition. 16-year-olds weigh only 16 kg.

The inspection also found a lack of complete documentation for the donations received by the social institution. The subject of the inspection was also the hygiene in the home. Then the management of the home did not agree with the accusations that the children were malnourished or that the hygiene did not meet the norms.

The chief doctor of the social institution explained that the diseases of 16-year-old children were the reason for their low weight and short stature, and were not due to malnutrition.

"New home for the children from Kulina", news article in РТС/RTS (Radio Television Serbia) from October 9, 2012

Source:

Novi dom za decu iz Kuline, article by Suzana Duka, dated 9 October 2012, РТС/RTS (Radio Televizija Srbije)


The article:

Novi dom za decu iz Kuline
Utorak, 09. okt. 2012.

Mališani iz doma u Kulini kod Aleksinca izmešteni u hraniteljske porodice i dečje domove. U Kulini ostaju samo odrasli. O premeštenoj deci vodiće se danonoćna briga i sa svakim od njih radiće se individualno.

Do kraja godine, u domu u Kulini kod Aleksinca, gde su krov nad glavom delili zajedno odrasli i deca sa najtežim smetnjama u razvoju, više neće biti nijednog deteta. Mališani su izmešteni u hraniteljske porodice ili u dečije domove, a u renoviranom domu ostaće samo odrasli.

Kampanja "Zovem se Anđela", ne samo da je šokirala javnost 2001. godine, već je i naterala nadležne da reše problem boravka dece sa smetnjama u razvoju ne samo u Kulini već i u drugim ustanovama tog tipa u Srbiji.

Deo mališana, koji su godinama živeli su u domu u Kulini, daleko od očiju javnosti, sada su u beogradskom domu u Zvečanskoj 7. Bolji uslovi života i danonoćna briga i nega stručnjaka daju rezultate.

"Rad sa njima organizovali smo kao i rad sa svom drugom decom, s tim što smo insistirali da što veći broj odraslih bude uključen u podršku deci, kako bismo dostigli optimalni cilj. To je individualni pristup uz puno uvažavanje specifičnosti svakog pojedinačanog deteta", kaže Mila Vuković Jovanović iz Radne jedinica za smeštaj uz intenzivnu podršku deci.

Iz Kuline je u Zvečansku stiglo pedesetak mališana sa najtežom smetnjama u razvoju. Ustanova, koja je do tada bila dom za decu bez roditeljskog staranja od rođenja do tri godine života, morala je da se prilagodi novonastalim okolnostima.

"Ovde su sad ušla deca i adolescenti koji imaju probleme i značajno izražene smetnje, drugačije potrebe, tako da je bilo potrebno pripremiti sve one uslove koji su neophodni da možemo da tretiramo sve probleme koje ta deca sa sobom nose", kaže Zoran Milačić, direktor Centra za zaštitu odojčadi, dece i omladine u Zvečanskoj 7.

U ustanovama socijalne zaštite ima još 390 dece sa smetnjama u razvoju. U nekim od tih ustanova, kažu u resornom ministarstvu, još ima problema.

Državna sekretarka u Ministarstvu rada i socijalne politike Brankica Janković objašanjava da u narednom periodu treba uraditi više na poboljšanju uslova.

"U pojedinim ustanovama stanje u kojima korisnici borave, odnosno deca, nije na zadovoljavajućem nivou. To se posebno odnosi na dom u Vetreniku i u Stavnici i u centru za autizam. U Beogradu planiramo da u dogovoru sa lokalnom samoupravom radimo na poboljšanju uslova", kaže Brankica Janković.

Judita Rajhenberg iz UNICEF-a napominje da će u narednom periodu prioritet biti jačanje kapaciteta zaposlenih, obuka zaposleni, ulaganja u opremu.

Ono o čemu se posvećivalo manje pažnje je saradnja sa nadležnim ministrastvima, kaže Judita Rajhenberg i smatra da treba više podrške da bi se postojeći planovi, koji su odlični, ostvarili.

"Mislim da je put zacrtan, dobar, ima ciljeve, nema skretanja i ne smemo sad posustati i treba napred i sa intenzitetom i kad dođu kritike, one nam mogu dati poriv, poticaj da ne zaboravimo da nismo završili posao", kaže Rajhenbergova.

Po izlasku iz domova za decu sa smetnjama u razvoju, neka deca nastavljaju život u malim domskim zajednicama, kakve trenutno postoje u Nišu, Aleksincu i Negotinu. Još dve domske zajednice uskoro se osnivaju u Beogradu i u Banji Koviljači. Cilj je da žive u uslovima najsličnijim porodici, uz podršku stručnjaka i da se kroz školovanje uključe u život zajednice.

English translation:

New home for the children from Kulina
Tuesday, 9 October 2012.

The children from the home in Kulina near Aleksinac were moved to foster families and children's homes. Only adults remain in Kulina. The transferred children will be taken care of day and night, and each of them will be treated individually.

By the end of the year, there will be no more children in the home in Kulina near Aleksinac, where adults and children with the most severe developmental disabilities shared the roof over their heads. The children have been moved to foster families or children's homes, and only adults will remain in the renovated home.

The campaign "My Name is Angela" not only shocked the public in 2001, but also forced the authorities to solve the problem of the stay of children with disabilities not only in Kulina but also in other institutions of that type in Serbia.

Some of the children, who lived for years at the home in Kulina, far from the public eye, are now in a Belgrade home in Zvečanska 7. Better living conditions and day and night care and care of experts give results.

"We organized work with them as well as work with our other children, insisting that as many adults as possible be involved in supporting children, in order to achieve the optimal goal. It is an individual approach with full respect for the specifics of each individual child," says Mila Vuković Jovanović from the Working Unit for Accommodation with Intensive Support for Children.

About fifty children with the most severe developmental disabilities arrived in Zvečanska from Kulina. The institution, which until then had been a home for children without parental care from birth to three years of age, had to adapt to the new circumstances.

"Children and adolescents who have problems and significantly expressed disabilities, different needs, have now entered here, so it was necessary to prepare all the conditions that are necessary so that we can treat all the problems that these children bring with them," says Zoran Milačić, director of the Center for the Protection of Infants, Children and Youth in Zvečanska 7.

There are another 390 children with disabilities in social protection institutions. In some of those institutions, they say in the relevant ministry, there are still problems.

State Secretary in the Ministry of Labor and Social Policy, Brankica Janković, explains that more needs to be done in the coming period to improve conditions.

"In some institutions, the situation in which the users stay, i.e. children, is not at a satisfactory level. This especially refers to the home in Vetrenik and Stavnica and in the autism center. In Belgrade we plan to work on improving conditions in agreement with the local government," says Brankica Janković.

Judith Reichenberg from UNICEF notes that in the coming period, the priority will be to strengthen the capacity of employees, train employees, and invest in equipment.

What has received less attention is the cooperation with the competent ministries, says Judith Reichenberg, and she believes that more support is needed in order for the existing plans, which are excellent, to be realised.

"I think the road is planned, good, there are goals, there are no turns and we must not give up now and we need to move forward and with intensity and when criticism comes, they can give us an impetus, an incentive not to forget that we have not finished the job," says Reichenberg.

After leaving the homes for children with disabilities, some children continue to live in small home communities, such as currently exist in Niš, Aleksinac and Negotin. Two more home communities will soon be established in Belgrade and in Banja Koviljača. The goal is to live in the conditions most similar to a family, with the support of experts and to get involved in community life through schooling.

What is deinstitutionalisation and why is it being done?

Source:


Deinstitutionalisation is the process of reforming child care systems and closing down orphanages and children's institutions, finding new placements for children currently resident and setting up replacement services to support vulnerable families in non-institutional ways. It became commonplace in many developed countries in the post-war period. It has been taking place in Eastern Europe since the fall of communism and is now encouraged by the EU for new entrants. It is also starting to take hold in Africa and Asia although often at individual institutions rather than statewide. New systems generally cost less than those they replace as many more children are kept with their own family.

Deinstitutionalisation is currently most common in the former Soviet Bloc. Increasingly the institutions that remain in Eastern Europe are occupied by disabled children who can be harder to place in the community. Completing their closure and supporting the development of places they can be cared for in the community is seen as a priority by the EU and that has encouraged many countries wishing to accede including the Czech Republic, Romania, whose orphanages are the most infamous in the world, and Bulgaria. It is also happening in Hungary where no new children can be placed in orphanages, Moldova, Ukraine, Belarus and Bosnia. Azerbaijan has established a Department for Deinstitutionalisation and Child Protection. Russia is also recognising children should be brought up in families but is not yet closing institutions.

More than 4 out of 5 children living in institutions are not orphans. This amount rises to 98% in Eastern Europe. The nature of orphanages means that they often fail to provide the individual sustained attention and stimulation a child would get from growing up within a family. In many cases the children living in them are at risk of harm. There are also many reports of orphanages being abusive or having very high death rates. They are a particular issue for babies and children under three years old as they can stop them making the attachments that they should. These attachments can be broken by staff changing jobs and children moving to other rooms as they get older. In reality a very small proportion of AIDS orphans are in orphanages and there is no way orphanages could be a sustainable option for all AIDS orphans, even if it was desirable.

An example from Romania: The Bucharest Early Intervention Project is a scientific study that compares the development of children raised in institutions with children raised in birth families and foster care. The study took random samples of 208 children and followed their physical growth, cognitive, emotional and behavioural development over a number of years. The study found:

1. For every 2.6 months spent in a Romanian institution a child falls behind one month of normal growth.

2. Institutionalised children had significantly lower IQs and levels of brain activity than the other children, especially those who were institutionalised at a young age.

3. Children in institutions were far more likely to have social and behavioural abnormalities, including aggressive behaviour problems, attention problems and hyperactivity, and a syndrome that mimics autism.

4. This syndrome and the behaviours disappear when the child is placed in a family.

It is considered important that all institution-to-home transitions must be accompanied by adequate preparation through individual and group counseling. The development of social work teams to manage fostering and adoption programs is also considered important.

When possible children are reunited with their birth or extended family. This may require short-term psychosocial or financial support but is generally seen as the ideal.

Children transitioning out of care and into the community may need significant support as their life skills may be limited. Failure to prepare them may cause a number of them to return to institutions in later life or end up in crime or prostitution.

Domestic adoption is adoption within the home country. Until a country's child protection system is well developed the adoption of children internationally is at risk of corruption.

Long-term fostering, defined as fostering for over a year, can often bridge the time between the closure of an institution and independent life.

Small group homes or family type homes — ideally with eight or fewer children — can provide life-time care for the most disabled children or act as a halfway house where children leaving an institution can learn to live in a family.

Some groups and NGOs that either specialise in deinstitutionalisation or have been involved with it include Lumos, Hope and Homes for Children, The Bulgarian Abandoned Children's Trust, UNICEF, the Bulgarian Helsinki Committee, Replace Campaign and Children's Emergency Relief International.

"Bulgaria: Orphans Suffer Dire Neglect", article in Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty News, November 9, 1997

Source: Bulgaria: Orphans Suffer Dire Neglect , article written by Anthony Georgieff for Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty News, 9 November, 1...