The 13-month-old Malawian boy who United States pop diva Madonna hopes to adopt has arrived in Britain on Tuesday on a private plane from Johannesburg, British media reported.
Earlier, a private jet had whisked the boy from Malawi to Johannesburg after Malawian authorities waived local rules to grant the pop star an interim adoption and issued the boy, David Banda, with a passport.
Neo Ntsoma, a photographer at Johannesburg’s Star newspaper, told Reuters she had recognised the child on his stopover from pictures in the media, but that bodyguards had blocked her from photographing him.
”I saw white people with a black baby. I thought these people might be the ones we were waiting for … When they reacted I was convinced,” Ntsoma said. ”They went through the boarding gate … The flight was going to London.”
The baby had left Malawi with one of Madonna’s bodyguards and her personal assistant, prompting charges from local human rights groups that she had used her celebrity status to bypass normal adoption rules.
”Madonna and her husband, filmmaker Guy Ritchie, have been granted an interim adoption of baby David by the courts in Malawi. He was issued a passport and a visa was granted earlier today [Monday] which allows him to travel outside of Malawi,” Madonna’s New York publicist said in a statement.
”This interim adoption grants David’s new parents temporary custody for 18 months, during which time they will be evaluated by the courts of Malawi per the tribal customs of the country. It is expected that the family will be reunited within the next few days.”
Rags to riches
Banda will swap his home in a dilapidated orphanage near the Zambian border for a life of luxury in London with one of the world’s most famous couples and their two children.
Malawian law bans adoptions by non-residents, but officials are granting an exemption to Madonna.
”The rich shouldn’t get preferential treatment. I am fine with the idea of the adoption but I want people to go through the system,” said Emmie Chanika, director of the Civil Liberties Committee.
About 59 rights groups had planned to ask the court on Monday to recognise them as involved parties, which would pave the way for them to apply for an injunction to block the adoption.
”We will proceed with the case. We still lodge an injunction,” said Maxwell Matewere, director of Eye of the Child, Malawi’s leading child advocacy group. ”If the court accepts the injunction then the baby must fly back.”
There was media speculation in Britain on Monday that Madonna may have failed to take the extensive series of detailed steps required to adopt a child from overseas.
In addition to two homes in Britain, the singer also has a home in Beverly Hills in the United States.
The couple arrived in Malawi on October 4 on what was described as a humanitarian trip, and left last Friday.
Madonna spent most of her time in Malawi visiting orphanages and meeting charity workers as part of a campaign to publicise the plight of about 900 000 orphans, around 7% of a population devastates by HIV/Aids.
She has pledged to donate about $3-million to the campaign to help these children, many of whom are themselves infected with HIV/Aids. The effort is being spearheaded by her charity, Raising Malawi. – Reuters