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Children cast their votes in Portugal’s presidential election, but for fictional characters

LISBON, Portugal (AP) — Children accompanying their parents to a polling station in Portugal’s presidential election Sunday got to try their hand at casting a vote, though the candidates weren’t on the ballot.

Fictional characters popular with children, such as Super Mario and Roblox, were on their ballot paper, not the two politicians in the official runoff. Parents said they hoped the exercise would teach them about democracy.

A polling station in the capital, Lisbon, offered children their say on who’s the best character, in what was believed to be the first time something like this was tried in a Portuguese election and is not a common practice elsewhere.

“Vote for your favorite character,” the ballot paper for the children said.

Catarina Barbosa, mother of 8-year-old Artur, said she thought it was an educational experience for her son.

“I always like to bring him to encourage him, so that when he is 18 he doesn’t stay on the couch and also comes to vote,” she said. “This is fun because this way he also feels he is voting and fulfilling his civic duties.”

Artur said that he recognized all the characters up for fictional election.

João Dias, father of 9-year-old João and 11-year-old Carolina, also encouraged his children to cast their vote.

“It’s important for children to start to understand, when they’re younger, the responsibility, so that when they reach adulthood they can understand not only their rights but also their duties,” he said.

A wall of nametags at a South Korean park testifies to adoptees’ longing for their birth mothers

PAJU, South Korea (AP) — Dozens of Korean adoptees from North America and Europe recently gathered to leave their names on a wall at a former U.S. military base, hoping that, after decades, a birth mother might still be looking for them. Misted in rain, they fastened ceramic nametags onto mesh that covered a cobblestone wall at Omma Poom Park — meaning “mother’s embrace" — in Paju, South Korea. More than 900 tags, suspended like unmailed letters, formed a quiet monument to years of mass child-parent separations that has created what's likely the world’s largest diaspora of adoptees. “There are so many tiles that hang, and yet that is merely a small fraction of us that exist,” said Nicole Rieth, adopted to Michigan when she was 4 months old, in January 1989.
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