Singer Madonna performs during a concert to celebrate
the launch of her new album "Hard Candy" in New York April 30.-
Xinhua/Reuters
Madonna is reportedly desperate to adopt a second child from Malawi, despite
the controversy surrounding the pop star's first adoption.
The Give It 2 Me singer wants to give a home to two-year-old girl Mercy James
- whose mother died in childbirth and lives in an orphanage - but the child's
family have said they are "not interested" in the proposition.
Madonna, 49, tried to push the adoption through last year, but Mercy's uncle
John Nglande blocked it.
The star reportedly renewed attempts to adopt the toddler in May by sending
aides to speak to her family, but they are only prepared to go ahead with the
plan if Mercy is returned to them when she is six years old.
Mercy's grandmother Anaphiri is quoted by Britain's Daily Mirror newspaper as
saying: "When Mercy is no longer a baby we want her back. I do not want the
money they said they'd give me."
Madonna's adoption of two-year old Malawian David Banda - a process she began
in 2006 - was finalised earlier this year.
It was claimed the singer had received special treatment as laws which ban
non-residents from adopting children in the country were ignored.
She was widely criticised when it was discovered that while David's mother
had died, his father was still alive and had been visiting him in his orphanage.
It was confirmed yesterday that Asienti Mwale, the women who raised David in
Malawi, died on Sunday night of pneumonia.
Madonna - who has two other children, Lourdes, 11, and eight-year-old Rocco -
recently said the adoption process was like "natural childbirth".
She said: "It was painful and a big struggle and I didn't understand it. In
the end, I rationalised that when a woman goes through natural childbirth, she
suffers an enormous amount. I went through my own kind of birthing
pains."