Madonna: 'Wealth and position' didn't help
NEW YORK (AP) -- Madonna said the 13-month-old boy she plans to adopt from the African country of Malawi is healthy and thriving in her London home, in an interview that aired Wednesday on "The Oprah Winfrey Show." The child, David Banda, was taken to London last week after Malawi's High Court granted Madonna and her husband, director Guy Ritchie, an interim adoption order. Madonna said David was healthy, despite having overcome malaria and tuberculosis. The interview was taped Tuesday via satellite from London. (What do you think of the Madonna adoption? Send us your comments.) "David is amazing," the 48-year-old pop star said. "What really surprises me is how great my children are with him and how he's transitioned so easily from living in Africa in an orphanage to living in our house."( Watch what some in Oprah's audience thought about Madonna's appearance -- 2:14) David's father, Yohane Banda, has said he didn't understand the adoption meant he would give up custody of his son "for good." But in an interview posted Tuesday on Time magazine's Web site , Banda said he will not contest the adoption. "I don't want my child, who is already gone, to come back," he said. "I will be killing his future if I accept that." Banda has said he is too poor to raise David. Madonna said she met Banda, who thanked her for giving his son a new life. "I sat in that room, I looked into that man's eyes," she said. The 30-minute interview with Winfrey was the first time Madonna had spoken on TV about the adoption, which has been challenged by human rights groups that allege the singer used her fame and fortune to flout Malawai's adoption laws. "If only my wealth and my position could have made things go faster," she said. "I assure you it doesn't matter who you are and how much money you have, nothing goes fast in Africa." Typically, prospective parents are required to stay in the country during the 18-month evaluation period, but the judge who granted the interim custody order October 12 said the issue of residence is not specified in the laws. A social worker in London will check on David for the next 18 months. (Watch why the father thought the agreement wasn't permanent -- 2:26 ) The singer said she initially was urged to consider adopting a child in Ethiopia or Kenya because of Malawi's vague adoption laws. "I did have my heart set on David, but I was also told there was a possibility I wouldn't be able to adopt him," she said. "I was told to look around at all the orphanages." Madonna said she was worried the firestorm of publicity that surrounded the adoption may dissuade other parents from adopting children from Africa. "I wanted to go into a Third World country -- I wasn't sure where -- and give a life to a child who might not otherwise have had one," she said. "I'm disappointed because more than anything it discourages other people from doing the same thing," she said. "I feel the media is doing a great disservice to all the orphans of Africa, period, not just the orphans of Malawi." Winfrey, whose talk show is based in Chicago, commended Madonna for the adoption. "I have to say, Madonna, that's a brave thing that you did," Winfrey said. "This audience, I know, applauds you for it." David has spent most of his life in an orphanage. His mother died shortly after childbirth. Madonna and Ritchie traveled to the southeast African country on October 4. They spent eight days visiting orphanages the singer is funding through her charity. Madonna has two children -- daughter Lourdes, 9, and son Rocco, 6. Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Source: www.checkfreshnews.com
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