Actress Angelina Jolie
looks at executive producer Brad Pitt at as he answers a reporter's
question at the premiere of "God Grew Tired of Us" at the Pacific Design
Center in Los Angeles January 8, 2007. [Reuters]
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Paris - Hollywood actress Angelina Jolie has said she was shocked by attacks
on Madonna over her adoption of a Malawian boy, but said she would only take a
child from a country where the rules on adoption are clearly defined.
Madonna's adoption of the boy last year led some rights groups in Malawi to
question whether the American pop star had used her celebrity to bypass laws
governing the adoption of Malawians by foreigners -- an argument denied by her
lawyers.
"I was horrified by the attacks against her," Jolie, who has two adopted
children herself, told French magazine Gala.
But Jolie added that she would have steered clear of adoption from a country
like Malawi.
"Madonna knew the situation in Malawi ... In this
country, there is not really a legal framework for adopting. Personally, I
prefer staying on the right side of the law. I would never bring back a child from a country where adoption
is illegal."
US singer Madonna poses
with her daughter Lourdes (L), son Rocco (R) and one-year-old Malawian boy
David Banda in central London in this handout photograph released October
26, 2006. [Reuters]
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On Monday Jolie said in a statement issued in New York: "The article included
many falsehoods. I said many positive things that were omitted. I feel we must
focus on the present and I encourage everyone to be supportive so that every
child can adjust nicely to their new home."
Jolie and actor Brad Pitt have formed one of Hollywood's most glamorous
families with baby daughter Shiloh, adopted Ethiopian daughter Zahara and
adopted Cambodian son Maddox.
Madonna signed interim adoption papers for one-year old David Banda when she
and her husband, British film director Guy Ritchie, visited Malawi in October on
what they said was a humanitarian mission to help orphans.
David Banda, whose mother had died, was living in an orphanage and his father
-- who initially voiced some questions about the process -- later said he
supported it.
Under the interim order, David Banda was to stay with Madonna for 18 months
during which time his progress would be monitored by Malawian officials before
deciding whether final approval may be given for him to remain with her family.