Chad’s
‘Orphans’ To Reunites With Families
Chad
has given permission for 103 children who were caught up in a
trafficking scandal to be reunited with their families.
The children have been staying in an orphanage in Chad, and are to be
handed over to relatives in the coming days.
According to UNICEF their return home has been delayed until Chadian
officials could identify the correct guardians.
Six French aid workers were convicted of trying to abduct them,
describing them as orphans from war-torn Darfur.
The UN agency said the French charity involved, Zoe's Ark, had left very
little paperwork about the children's identities.
Jean-Francois Basse, a spokesman for UNICEF in Chad, said that although
some of the children were orphans, they were able to locate the
guardians for most of the children.
He
was quoted as saying that “out of the 103 children we were able to
locate those who were in charge of the children for 97 of them.”
The children hail from Chadian regions close to the country's border
with Sudan.
The scandal emerged when it was revealed that most of the 21 girls and
82 boys were from Chad, and had relatives who were still alive.
Trial
During their trial in the Chadian capital N'Djamena last year, the aid
workers said they had been tricked into thinking the children were from
the troubled Sudanese province of Darfur.
The six have since been returned to France to serve out their jail
terms.
Chadian President Idriss Deby says he will consider pardoning the aid
workers on condition the children's families receive compensation.
BBC/AOA/ Qasim