Meagan Paterson is talking to me in a café in Torquay, her face drawn and eyes downcast. She is approximately 7000 kilometres away from her five-year-old daughter Pisey, who is waiting patiently in a Cambodian rape shelter for the Australian Immigration Minister to decide if she can join her family here.
Meagan gives me dates, anecdotes, statistics. She tells me names, lists Government departments and relays conversations had during migration review hearings. She cries. She tells me she misses her little girl.
Meagan and Michael Paterson’s fraught adoption journey began in Cambodia more than three years ago when they lived in Cambodia as expatriates and worked at Ptea Teuk Dong, a rape and homelessness crisis centre, in Battambang Province, Cambodia. The Paterson’s met Pisey when she was 18 months old. Her mum had been raped and sought crisis accommodation at the centre. Meagan and Michel fell in love with the happy, outgoing toddler and when her mother decided to move back to her village without Pisey, the Paterson’s decided to adopt her.
“We didn’t realise then what a rollercoaster it would be,” Meagan says.
“We always expected it would be a complicated process, especially from the Cambodian side, but certainly not the level of difficulty we have faced from the Australian Government.”
Meagan and Michael’s troubles began when they heard Meagan’s dad, Bill, had been diagnosed with cancer. The couple sought the advice of the Australian consulate in Cambodia, who assured them that if they returned home without Pisey, the Australian Government would be able to award Pisey a visa to join her family here on compassionate grounds.
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I’m so happy that the Paterson family is on their way to get Pisey. They may have saved this girl from a life of abandonment. I wasn’t surprised to read how difficult the adoption process was, especially considering that Pisey was living at a center for rape victims. Sexual abuse and sex tourism are realities of Southeast Asia, and for this reason, governments, adoption agencies, and courts should take extra precautions when deciding on an at-risk child’s adoptive parents. I live in Thailand, where adoption procedures are also tough because of the amount of people that travel here for sex tourism. Thailand lawyers that specialize in international adoption law are available and would most likely be recommended for a case like that of Pisey and the Patersons. The Patersons seems to have hearts of gold, but this is not always the case and why international adoption is often so difficult.
An important reminder of the challenges around international adoption.