TRATTATI
CONVENTION ON PROTECTION OF CHILDREN
AND CO-OPERATION IN RESPECT OF INTERCOUNTRY ADOPTION
Concluded 29 May 1993
Entered into force 1 May 1995
The States signatory to the present
Convention,
Recognizing that the child, for the full and harmonious development
of his or her personality, should grow up in a family environment, in
an atmosphere of happiness, love and understanding,
Recalling that each State should take, as a matter of priority, appropriate
measures to enable the child to remain in the care of his or her family
of origin,
Recognizing that intercountry adoption may offer the advantage of a
permanent family to a child for whom a suitable family cannot be found
in his or her State of origin,
Convinced of the necessity to take measures to ensure that intercountry
adoptions are made in the best interests of the child and with respect
for his or her fundamental rights, and to prevent the abduction, the
sale of, or traffic in children,
Desiring to establish common provisions to this effect, taking into
account the principles set forth in international instruments, in particular
the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, of 20 November
1989, and the United Nations Declaration on Social and Legal Principles
relating to the Protection and Welfare of Children, with Special Reference
to Foster Placement and Adoption Nationally and Internationally (General
Assembly Resolution 41/85, of 3 December 1986),
Have agreed upon the following provisions –
CHAPTER I – SCOPE OF THE CONVENTION
Article 1
The objects of the present Convention are –
a) to establish safeguards to ensure that intercountry
adoptions take place in the best interests of the child and with respect
for his or her fundamental rights as recognized in international law;
b) to establish a system of co-operation amongst
Contracting States to ensure that those safeguards are respected and
thereby prevent the abduction, the sale of, or traffic in children;
c) to secure the recognition in Contracting States
of adoptions made in accordance with the Convention.
Article 2
(1) The Convention shall apply where a child habitually
resident in one Contracting State ("the State of origin")
has been, is being, or is to be moved to another Contracting State ("the
receiving State") either after his or her adoption in the State
of origin by spouses or a person habitually resident in the receiving
State, or for the purposes of such an adoption in the receiving State
or in the State of origin.
(2) The Convention covers only adoptions which
create a permanent parent-child relationship.
Article 3
The Convention ceases to apply if the agreements
mentioned in Article 17, sub-paragraph c, have not been given before
the child attains the age of eighteen years.
CHAPTER II – REQUIREMENTS FOR INTERCOUNTRY
ADOPTIONS
Article 4
An adoption within the scope of the Convention
shall take place only if the competent authorities of the State of origin
–
a) have established that the child is adoptable;
b) have determined, after possibilities for placement
of the child within the State of origin have been given due consideration,
that an intercountry adoption is in the child's best interests;
c) have ensured that
(1) the persons, institutions and authorities
whose consent is necessary for adoption, have been counselled as may
be necessary and duly informed of the effects of their consent, in particular
whether or not an adoption will result in the termination of the legal
relationship between the child and his or her family of origin,
(2) such persons, institutions and authorities
have given their consent freely, in the required legal form, and expressed
or evidenced in writing,
(3) the consents have not been induced by payment
or compensation of any kind and have not been withdrawn, and
(4) the consent of the mother, where required,
has been given only after the birth of the child; and
d) have ensured, having regard to the age and
degree of maturity of the child, that
(1) he or she has been counselled and duly informed
of the effects of the adoption and of his or her consent to the adoption,
where such consent is required,
(2) consideration has been given to the child's
wishes and opinions,
(3) the child's consent to the adoption, where
such consent is required, has been given freely, in the required legal
form, and expressed or evidenced in writing, and
(4) such consent has not been induced by payment
or compensation of any kind.
Article 5
An adoption within the scope of the Convention
shall take place only if the competent authorities of the receiving
State –
a) have determined that the prospective adoptive
parents are eligible and suited to adopt;
b) have ensured that the prospective adoptive
parents have been counselled as may be necessary; and
c) have determined that the child is or will be
authorized to enter and reside permanently in that State.
CHAPTER III – CENTRAL
AUTHORITIES AND ACCREDITED BODIES
Article 6
(1) A Contracting State shall designate a Central
Authority to discharge the duties which are imposed by the Convention
upon such authorities.
(2) Federal States, States with more than one
system of law or States having autonomous territorial units shall be
free to appoint more than one Central Authority and to specify the territorial
or personal extent of their functions. Where a State has appointed more
than one Central Authority, it shall designate the Central Authority
to which any communication may be addressed for transmission to the
appropriate Central Authority within that State.
Article 7
(1) Central Authorities shall co-operate with
each other and promote co-operation amongst the competent authorities
in their States to protect children and to achieve the other objects
of the Convention.
(2) They shall take directly all appropriate measures
to –
a) provide information as to the laws of their
States concerning adoption and other general information, such as statistics
and standard forms;
b) keep one another informed about the operation
of the Convention and, as far as possible, eliminate any obstacles to
its application.
Article 8
Central Authorities shall take, directly or through
public authorities, all appropriate measures to prevent improper financial
or other gain in connection with an adoption and to deter all practices
contrary to the objects of the Convention.
Article 9
Central Authorities shall take, directly or through
public authorities or other bodies duly accredited in their State, all
appropriate measures, in particular to –
a) collect, preserve and exchange information
about the situation of the child and the prospective adoptive parents,
so far as is necessary to complete the adoption;
b) facilitate, follow and expedite proceedings
with a view to obtaining the adoption;
c) promote the development of adoption counselling
and post-adoption services in their States;
d) provide each other with general evaluation
reports about experience with intercountry adoption;
e) reply, in so far as is permitted by the law
of their State, to justified requests from other Central Authorities
or public authorities for information about a particular adoption situation.
Article 10
Accreditation shall only be granted to and maintained
by bodies demonstrating their competence to carry out properly the tasks
with which they may be entrusted.
Article 11
An accredited body shall –
a) pursue only non-profit objectives according
to such conditions and within such limits as may be established by the
competent authorities of the State of accreditation;
b) be directed and staffed by persons qualified
by their ethical standards and by training or experience to work in
the field of intercountry adoption; and
c) be subject to supervision by competent authorities
of that State as to its composition, operation and financial situation.
Article 12
A body accredited in one Contracting State may
act in another Contracting State only if the competent authorities of
both States have authorized it to do so.
Article 13
The designation of the Central Authorities and,
where appropriate, the extent of their functions, as well as the names
and addresses of the accredited bodies shall be communicated by each
Contracting State to the Permanent Bureau of the Hague Conference on
Private International Law.
CHAPTER IV – PROCEDURAL
REQUIREMENTS IN INTERCOUNTRY ADOPTION
Article 14
Persons habitually resident in a Contracting State,
who wish to adopt a child habitually resident in another Contracting
State, shall apply to the Central Authority in the State of their habitual
residence.
Article 15
(1) If the Central Authority of the receiving
State is satisfied that the applicants are eligible and suited to adopt,
it shall prepare a report including information about their identity,
eligibility and suitability to adopt, background, family and medical
history, social environment, reasons for adoption, ability to undertake
an intercountry adoption, as well as the characteristics of the children
for whom they would be qualified to care.
(2) It shall transmit the report to the Central
Authority of the State of origin.
Article 16
(1) If the Central Authority of the State of origin
is satisfied that the child is adoptable, it shall –
a) prepare a report including information about
his or her identity, adoptability, background, social environment, family
history, medical history including that of the child's family, and any
special needs of the child;
b) give due consideration to the child's upbringing
and to his or her ethnic, religious and cultural background;
c) ensure that consents have been obtained in
accordance with Article 4; and
d) determine, on the basis in particular of the
reports relating to the child and the prospective adoptive parents,
whether the envisaged placement is in the best interests of the child.
(2) It shall transmit to the Central Authority
of the receiving State its report on the child, proof that the necessary
consents have been obtained and the reasons for its determination on
the placement, taking care not to reveal the identity of the mother
and the father if, in the State of origin, these identities may not
be disclosed.
Article 17
Any decision in the State of origin that a child
should be entrusted to prospective adoptive parents may only be made
if –
a) the Central Authority of that State has ensured
that the prospective adoptive parents agree;
b) the Central Authority of the receiving State
has approved such decision, where such approval is required by the law
of that State or by the Central Authority of the State of origin;
c) the Central Authorities of both States have
agreed that the adoption may proceed; and
d) it has been determined, in accordance with
Article 5, that the prospective adoptive parents are eligible and suited
to adopt and that the child is or will be authorized to enter and reside
permanently in the receiving State.
Article 18
The Central Authorities of both States shall take
all necessary steps to obtain permission for the child to leave the
State of origin and to enter and reside permanently in the receiving
State.
Article 19
(1) The transfer of the child to the receiving
State may only be carried out if the requirements of Article 17 have
been satisfied.
(2) The Central Authorities of both States shall
ensure that this transfer takes place in secure and appropriate circumstances
and, if possible, in the company of the adoptive or prospective adoptive
parents.
(3) If the transfer of the child does not take
place, the reports referred to in Articles 15 and 16 are to be sent
back to the authorities who forwarded them.
Article 20
The Central Authorities shall keep each other
informed about the adoption process and the measures taken to complete
it, as well as about the progress of the placement if a probationary
period is required.
Article 21
(1) Where the adoption is to take place after
the transfer of the child to the receiving State and it appears to the
Central Authority of that State that the continued placement of the
child with the prospective adoptive parents is not in the child's best
interests, such Central Authority shall take the measures necessary
to protect the child, in particular –
a) to cause the child to be withdrawn from the
prospective adoptive parents and to arrange temporary care;
b) in consultation with the Central Authority
of the State of origin, to arrange without delay a new placement of
the child with a view to adoption or, if this is not appropriate, to
arrange alternative long-term care; an adoption shall not take place
until the Central Authority of the State of origin has been duly informed
concerning the new prospective adoptive parents;
c) as a last resort, to arrange the return of
the child, if his or her interests so require.
(2) Having regard in particular to the age and
degree of maturity of the child, he or she shall be consulted and, where
appropriate, his or her consent obtained in relation to measures to
be taken under this Article.
Article 22
(1) The functions of a Central Authority under
this Chapter may be performed by public authorities or by bodies accredited
under Chapter III, to the extent permitted by the law of its State.
(2) Any Contracting State may declare to the depositary
of the Convention that the functions of the Central Authority under
Articles 15 to 21 may be performed in that State, to the extent permitted
by the law and subject to the supervision of the competent authorities
of that State, also by bodies or persons who –
a) meet the requirements of integrity, professional
competence, experience and accountability of that State; and
b) are qualified by their ethical standards and
by training or experience to work in the field of intercountry adoption.
(3) A Contracting State which makes the declaration
provided for in paragraph 2 shall keep the Permanent Bureau of the Hague
Conference on Private International Law informed of the names and addresses
of these bodies and persons.
(4) Any Contracting State may declare to the depositary
of the Convention that adoptions of children habitually resident in
its territory may only take place if the functions of the Central Authorities
are performed in accordance with paragraph 1.
(5) Notwithstanding any declaration made under
paragraph 2, the reports provided for in Articles 15 and 16 shall, in
every case, be prepared under the responsibility of the Central Authority
or other authorities or bodies in accordance with paragraph 1.
CHAPTER V – RECOGNITION
AND EFFECTS OF THE ADOPTION
Article 23
(1) An adoption certified by the competent authority
of the State of the adoption as having been made in accordance with
the Convention shall be recognized by operation of law in the other
Contracting States. The certificate shall specify when and by whom the
agreements under Article 17, sub-paragraph c), were given.
(2) Each Contracting State shall, at the time
of signature, ratification, acceptance, approval or accession, notify
the depositary of the Convention of the identity and the functions of
the authority or the authorities which, in that State, are competent
to make the certification. It shall also notify the depositary of any
modification in the designation of these authorities.
Article 24
The recognition of an adoption may be refused
in a Contracting State only if the adoption is manifestly contrary to
its public policy, taking into account the best interests of the child.
Article 25
Any Contracting State may declare to the depositary
of the Convention that it will not be bound under this Convention to
recognize adoptions made in accordance with an agreement concluded by
application of Article 39, paragraph 2.
Article 26
(1) The recognition of an adoption includes recognition
of
a) the legal parent-child relationship between
the child and his or her adoptive parents;
b) parental responsibility of the adoptive parents
for the child;
c) the termination of a pre-existing legal relationship
between the child and his or her mother and father, if the adoption
has this effect in the Contracting State where it was made.
(2) In the case of an adoption having the effect
of terminating a pre-existing legal parent-child relationship, the child
shall enjoy in the receiving State, and in any other Contracting State
where the adoption is recognized, rights equivalent to those resulting
from adoptions having this effect in each such State.
(3) The preceding paragraphs shall not prejudice
the application of any provision more favourable for the child, in force
in the Contracting State which recognizes the adoption.
Article 27
(1) Where an adoption granted in the State of
origin does not have the effect of terminating a pre-existing legal
parent-child relationship, it may, in the receiving State which recognizes
the adoption under the Convention, be converted into an adoption having
such an effect –
a) if the law of the receiving State so permits;
and
b) if the consents referred to in Article 4, sub-paragraphs
c and d, have been or are given for the purpose of such an adoption.
(2) Article 23 applies to the decision converting
the adoption.
CHAPTER VI – GENERAL PROVISIONS
Article 28
The Convention does not affect any law of a State
of origin which requires that the adoption of a child habitually resident
within that State take place in that State or which prohibits the child's
placement in, or transfer to, the receiving State prior to adoption.
Article 29
There shall be no contact between the prospective
adoptive parents and the child's parents or any other person who has
care of the child until the requirements of Article 4, sub-paragraphs
a) to c), and Article 5, sub-paragraph a), have been met, unless the
adoption takes place within a family or unless the contact is in compliance
with the conditions established by the competent authority of the State
of origin.
Article 30
(1) The competent authorities of a Contracting
State shall ensure that information held by them concerning the child's
origin, in particular information concerning the identity of his or
her parents, as well as the medical history, is preserved.
(2) They shall ensure that the child or his or
her representative has access to such information, under appropriate
guidance, in so far as is permitted by the law of that State.
Article 31
Without prejudice to Article 30, personal data
gathered or transmitted under the Convention, especially data referred
to in Articles 15 and 16, shall be used only for the purposes for which
they were gathered or transmitted.
Article 32
(1) No one shall derive improper financial or
other gain from an activity related to an intercountry adoption.
(2) Only costs and expenses, including reasonable
professional fees of persons involved in the adoption, may be charged
or paid.
(3) The directors, administrators and employees
of bodies involved in an adoption shall not receive remuneration which
is unreasonably high in relation to services rendered.
Article 33
A competent authority which finds that any provision
of the Convention has not been respected or that there is a serious
risk that it may not be respected, shall immediately inform the Central
Authority of its State. This Central Authority shall be responsible
for ensuring that appropriate measures are taken.
Article 34
If the competent authority of the State of destination
of a document so requests, a translation certified as being in conformity
with the original must be furnished. Unless otherwise provided, the
costs of such translation are to be borne by the prospective adoptive
parents.
Article 35
The competent authorities of the Contracting States
shall act expeditiously in the process of adoption.
Article 36
In relation to a State which has two or more systems
of law with regard to adoption applicable in different territorial units
–
a) any reference to habitual residence in that
State shall be construed as referring to habitual residence in a territorial
unit of that State;
b) any reference to the law of that State shall
be construed as referring to the law in force in the relevant territorial
unit;
c) any reference to the competent authorities
or to the public authorities of that State shall be construed as referring
to those authorized to act in the relevant territorial unit;
d) any reference to the accredited bodies of that
State shall be construed as referring to bodies accredited in the relevant
territorial unit.
Article 37
In relation to a State which with regard to adoption
has two or more systems of law applicable to different categories of
persons, any reference to the law of that State shall be construed as
referring to the legal system specified by the law of that State.
Article 38
A State within which different territorial units
have their own rules of law in respect of adoption shall not be bound
to apply the Convention where a State with a unified system of law would
not be bound to do so.
Article 39
(1) The Convention does not affect any international
instrument to which Contracting States are Parties and which contains
provisions on matters governed by the Convention, unless a contrary
declaration is made by the States Parties to such instrument.
(2) Any Contracting State may enter into agreements
with one or more other Contracting States, with a view to improving
the application of the Convention in their mutual relations. These agreements
may derogate only from the provisions of Articles 14 to 16 and 18 to
21. The States which have concluded such an agreement shall transmit
a copy to the depositary of the Convention.
Article 40
No reservation to the Convention shall be permitted.
Article 41
The Convention shall apply in every case where
an application pursuant to Article 14 has been received after the Convention
has entered into force in the receiving State and the State of origin.
Article 42
The Secretary General of the Hague Conference
on Private International Law shall at regular intervals convene a Special
Commission in order to review the practical operation of the Convention.
CHAPTER VII – FINAL CLAUSES
Article 43
(1) The Convention shall be open for signature
by the States which were Members of the Hague Conference on Private
International Law at the time of its Seventeenth Session and by the
other States which participated in that Session.
(2) It shall be ratified, accepted or approved
and the instruments of ratification, acceptance or approval shall be
deposited with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Kingdom of the
Netherlands, depositary of the Convention.
Article 44
(1) Any other State may accede to the Convention
after it has entered into force in accordance with Article 46, paragraph
1.
(2) The instrument of accession shall be deposited
with the depositary.
(3) Such accession shall have effect only as regards
the relations between the acceding State and those Contracting States
which have not raised an objection to its accession in the six months
after the receipt of the notification referred to in sub-paragraph b)
of Article 48. Such an objection may also be raised by States at the
time when they ratify, accept or approve the Convention after an accession.
Any such objection shall be notified to the depositary.
Article 45
(1) If a State has two or more territorial units
in which different systems of law are applicable in relation to matters
dealt with in the Convention, it may at the time of signature, ratification,
acceptance, approval or accession declare that this Convention shall
extend to all its territorial units or only to one or more of them and
may modify this declaration by submitting another declaration at any
time.
(2) Any such declaration shall be notified to
the depositary and shall state expressly the territorial units to which
the Convention applies.
(3) If a State makes no declaration under this
Article, the Convention is to extend to all territorial units of that
State.
Article 46
(1) The Convention shall enter into force on the
first day of the month following the expiration of three months after
the deposit of the third instrument of ratification, acceptance or approval
referred to in Article 43.
(2) Thereafter the Convention shall enter into
force –
a) for each State ratifying, accepting or approving
it subsequently, or acceding to it, on the first day of the month following
the expiration of three months after the deposit of its instrument of
ratification, acceptance, approval or accession;
b) for a territorial unit to which the Convention
has been extended in conformity with Article 45, on the first day of
the month following the expiration of three months after the notification
referred to in that Article.
Article 47
(1) A State Party to the Convention may denounce
it by a notification in writing addressed to the depositary.
(2) The denunciation takes effect on the first
day of the month following the expiration of twelve months after the
notification is received by the depositary. Where a longer period for
the denunciation to take effect is specified in the notification, the
denunciation takes effect upon the expiration of such longer period
after the notification is received by the depositary.
Article 48
The depositary shall notify the States Members
of the Hague Conference on Private International Law, the other States
which participated in the Seventeenth Session and the States which have
acceded in accordance with Article 44, of the following –
a) the signatures, ratifications, acceptances
and approvals referred to in Article 43;
b) the accessions and objections raised to accessions
referred to in Article 44;
c) the date on which the Convention enters into
force in accordance with Article 46;
d) the declarations and designations referred
to in Articles 22, 23, 25 and 45;
e) the agreements referred to in Article 39;
f) the denunciations referred to in Article 47.
In witness whereof the undersigned,
being duly authorized thereto, have signed this Convention.
Done at The Hague, on the 29th day of
May 1993, in the English and French languages, both texts being equally
authentic, in a single copy which shall be deposited in the archives
of the Government of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, and of which a
certified copy shall be sent, through diplomatic channels, to each of
the States Members of the Hague Conference on Private International
Law at the date of its Seventeenth Session and to each of the other
States which participated in that Session.
Fonte: http://www.hcch.int
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