A plane carrying Haitian orphans arrived in Ottawa Saturday afternoon, uniting children from the devastated country with their adoptive Canadian parents.

The flight was the third airlift of Haitian children authorized by Citizenship and Immigration Canada since an earthquake struck near Port-au-Prince Jan. 12, leaving thousands homeless or injured and plunging the Caribbean nation into a humanitarian crisis.

More than 60 adoptees were on the flight, ranging in age from three months to 17 years. Dressed in snowsuits to protect them from the bitter cold, the children were met with warm embraces from their new parents.

Chris and Adyne Bell of Alberta waited anxiously in Ottawa for more than a week for their new daughters to arrive.

"It's just so overwhelming, just so happy, happy to see them," Adyne Bell told CTV News.

Other parents had similar reactions.

"She just looked at me, she was very cool, she was very calm . . . so it's the best day of my life," Caroline Lebec said.

Nearly half of the children on today's flight are under two years old and government officials, a medical team and airline caregivers are accompanying the children.

The children are all orphans who were in the process of being adopted by Canadian parents before the earthquake struck.

The Haitian government has so far approved 217 children for flights to Canada, Citizenship and Immigration said.

A total of 85 children have so far been united with their families in Canada: 24 on a flight last Sunday, 52 on a second airlift on Wednesday, and nine more coming through United States or Canadian Forces evacuation flights.

The federal government has come under some criticism for acting too slowly to help Haitian children being adopted by Canadian parents.

Immigration Minister Jason Kenney said this week that Ottawa will move to speed up evacuation flights for such children and also to expedite the adoption process.

"I've directed my officials to issue temporary resident permits, which is an extraordinary measure, to allow these children to enter Canada as quickly as possible," Kenney said.

The Dutch and U.S. governments authorized airlifts of orphans well ahead of Canada, and many Canadian parents adopting Haitian children said the government was not doing enough to help them or their children.

A statement Monday from Citizenship and Immigration said adoptive children and unsupervised dependants of Canadians are "being given priority processing." But the government could offer no estimate as to how long this might take.