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U.S. Lawmakers Urge Medvedev to Continue Adoptions

WASHINGTON — A group of U.S. lawmakers is calling on President Dmitry Medvedev not to suspend adoptions between Russia and the United States.

The group, led by Democratic Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, wants Medvedev to intervene with Russian authorities to ensure that adoptions of Russian children by American families, especially those already being processed, not be halted.

Russian authorities have said all adoptions to the United States are on hold pending a new agreement on the matter that could take months.

In a letter sent Friday to Medvedev and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, Gillibrand, four other senators and 12 House members say they understand the concerns that led Russia to impose the freeze.

Moscow acted following an incident this month in which an American woman put her adopted Russian son, 8-year-old Artyom Savelyev, on a plane alone to Moscow. She said she "no longer wishes to parent" the boy.

A U.S. delegation is to travel to Moscow next week to discuss a new adoption agreement.

The lawmakers appealed to Medvedev, urging him to ensure that "adoptions between our two countries — particularly those already in process — will continue."

They said they "stand ready to support such improvements as are needed to serve the best interests of the children and their new families."

More than 1,800 children from Russia were adopted in the United States last year, according to the Russian Education and Science Ministry.

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