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A JUDGE
on Wednesday approved Madonna’s adoption of a Malawian
boy she met in an orphanage in 2006.
The
49-year-old pop star wasn’t in court for the ruling,
which took Justice Andrew Nyirenda an hour to read.
Nyirenda said he was satisfied that Madonna and her
British filmmaker husband, Guy Ritchie, “are perfect
parents” for David, who will be 3 in November.
Madonna
and Ritchie have been caring for David in London.
“It’s
now official, David is Madonna’s baby,” the singer’s
Malawian lawyer, Alan Chinula, told reporters.
David’s
mother died when he was a month old. His father, Yohane
Banda, has said he believed he could not care for him
alone, and that placing him in an orphanage was the best
way to ensure David’s survival. The father has said he
didn’t object to the adoption.
Yohane
Banda said Wednesday he was glad the adoption was
successful.
“I am
glad it’s all over,” said the 33-year-old farmer, who
ekes out a living growing tomatoes, maize and onions. “I
am glad David has a new, good home.”
Critics
had accused Madonna of using her celebrity status to
circumvent Malawian adoption laws—allegations she
denies.
Malawian
law is fuzzy on foreign adoptions. Regulations stipulate
only that prospective parents undergo an 18- to 24-month
assessment period in Malawi, a rule that was bent when
Madonna was allowed to take David to London.
Speaking
to reporters last week at the Cannes Film Festival,
Madonna said the criticism hurt.
“It was
a big struggle, and I didn’t understand it,” she said,
comparing the process to the pain of childbirth. “But in
the end I rationalized that, when a woman has a child
and goes through natural childbirth, she [also] suffers
an enormous amount.”
Madonna
and Ritchie also have a son, Rocco, 7, and Madonna has a
daughter, Lourdes, 11.
Madonna
met David, while establishing charity projects in
Malawi. She is funding her own and six other orphanages
in the country.
Her
Raising Malawi organization also announced that the
singer is funding a multimillion-dollar academy for
disadvantaged children in Malawi.
I Am
Because We Are, a new documentary that Madonna produced
and narrated, shows poverty and disease devastating the
lives of Malawi’s children, and urges people to
volunteer. AP |