I get that, I really do. I do hope she gets placed for legal adoption and a family that could pass US standards and provide her with a clean, caring, loving home comes forward to adopt her. The reality though, in the country she lives in, and the one she was likely born in, if she is indeed a Roma child, is that she would be deemed unadoptable by the majority of the population. If she were to be placed in an orphanage with the stigma of being an unadoptable Roma, she would be far worse off than she ever could have been otherwise. Some of he orphanages in some of the countries over there are worse than concentration camps.
Her best hope, if it turns out she is this woman's bio child, is that she not be returned to either, and would be adopted internationally. I honestly don't see that happening though. I hope I am wrong, but I can see the authorities "washing their hands" of her, and returning her to where she was. In that case, the lesser of two evils would appear to be the family she's been with for most of her life.
I really would love to see her get saved from that fate though.
Her case got so much publicity. I don't believe for a second they wouldn't be able to find someone to adopt her.