Americans jailed in Haiti were not trafficking children, fellow congregants say

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MERIDIAN, Idaho — The church members left this Boise suburb the night of Jan 21
in an SUV, towing a U-Haul trailer full of children’s clothes and
diapers for the Haitian orphans they expected to rescue. On Tuesday,
the 10 Americans were in a Haitian jail, awaiting a hearing to
determine whether they would be charged for what officials there
contend was attempted kidnapping and child trafficking.

The group — whose members said they only intended to provide shelter and care in the neighboring Dominican Republic — was stopped at the border Friday night with 33 children, many of whom turned out not to be orphans.

At Central Valley Baptist Church here, officials
strongly dispute the suggestion that members of their congregation were
engaged in human trafficking. “It doesn’t match the character of any of
the people on this trip,” Pastor Clint Henry said Tuesday. “When our people get to tell their story, I think it’s going to make a difference.”

Before the Jan. 12 earthquake, two church members had started a charity that hoped to build an orphanage in the Dominican Republic to house Haitian children. But once the magnitude of the devastation was apparent, Laura Silsby, 40, and Charisa Coulter, 24, accelerated their plan.

They asked the church’s missions program to help
them get to the impoverished island nation as soon as possible and,
according to family and friends, secured a motel in the Dominican Republic
that could function as an orphanage. The congregation — horrified by
images of the quake — responded, Henry said. Stacks of donated goods
began piling up in the church lobby.

Members of Central Valley Baptist have traveled on overseas missions before, to places such as Brazil and Zimbabwe. But Henry said the hope was that an orphanage closer to the United States
would give congregants an opportunity to regularly help people in need.
“This was kind of a no-brainer,” he said. “Let’s go be a part of help
changing kids’ lives.”

The Central Valley group partnered with missionaries from another Baptist church in Twin Falls, Idaho. They were taking their first load of children from Haiti to the Dominican Republic when authorities stopped them.

Speaking from the Haitian jail, Silsby told
reporters Monday night that the group lacked formal paperwork to
transport the children, but that “God wanted us to come here to help
children, we are convinced of that,” she said.

Haiti’s prime minister has accused them of kidnapping. A government spokesman, Leontes Dorzilme, said he did not know when the 10 Americans would appear before a judge.

CNN interviewed some of the children’s living
parents, who said they had handed them over to Silsby, hoping the
youths would have better lives in her orphanage.

On Tuesday, the head of SOS Children’s Village —
which is now sheltering the children — said that while the youths were
in the Baptists’ care, they “weren’t well-dressed, they were
dehydrated. They needed medical assistance.”

“I don’t know all the facts,” Heather Paul said, “but if they were good intentions, they’ve certainly gone awry.”

Coulter’s father, Mel, said Tuesday said his
daughter and the other members of her expedition had to deal with a
chaotic situation when they arrived in Haiti.

“It’s easy to criticize them for not having all
their ducks in a row, but there wasn’t even a duck pond when they
landed,” he said. “They really felt led to be there. They had the best
interests of the children at heart.”

(c) 2010, Los Angeles Times.

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Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

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