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China-Japan-Koreas
South Korea accused of 'mass exporting' children in overseas adoptions
2025-03-27
[BBC] "mass exportation of children" by private agencies that were driven by profit, and found examples of fraud, falsified records and coercion.

South Korean governments committed numerous human rights violations over decades in a controversial programme that sent at least 170,000 children and babies abroad for adoption, a landmark inquiry has found.

It said the government's lack of oversight enabled the "mass exportation of children" by private agencies that were driven by profit, and found examples of fraud, falsified records and coercion.

Since the 1950s, South Korea has sent more children abroad for adoption than any other country, with most sent to Western countries.

South Korea has sinced moved to tighten its adoption processes, but some adoptees and their biological parents say they are still haunted by what they went through. The BBC spoke to one woman who claimed her adoptive parents "took better care of the dog than they ever did of me".

The report was released on Wednesday by the independent Truth and Reconciliation Commission following an investigation that began in 2022.

Since then, 367 adoptees - all of which were sent overseas between 1964 and 1999 - had filed petitions alleging fradulent practices in their adoption process.

Some 100 petitions have been analysed so far, of whom 56 adoptees were recognised as victims of human rights violations. The commission is still investigating other cases, with the inquiry set to end in May.

In the aftermath of the Korean war, South Korea was one of the poorest countries in the world and few families were keen on adopting children.

South Korea's government then began a transnational adoption programme handled by private agencies, which were given significant powers through special adoption laws.

But there was a "systemic failure in oversight and management", which led to numerous lapses committed by these agencies, according to the report.

The report noted that foreign agencies had demanded a set number of children every month and Korean agencies complied, "facilitating large-scale intercountry adoptions with minimal procedural oversight".

With no government regulation on fees, the Korean agencies charged large amounts and demanded "donations", which turned adoptions into "a profit-driven industry", according to the report.

Other lapses include adoptions conducted without proper consent from birth mothers and inadequate screening of adoptive parents.

The agencies also fabricated reports that made children appear as if they were abandoned and put up for adoption; and intentionally gave children wrong identities.

Because many adoptees had false identities listed in their paperwork, they now struggle to obtain information about their birth families and are left with inadequate legal protection, the report noted.

The commission has recommended the government deliver an official apology, and to comply with international standards on transnational adoptions.

South Korea has moved to tighten its adoption processes in recent years. In 2023, it passed a law ensuring that all overseas adoptions would be handled by a government ministry instead of private agencies, which is due to come into effect by July.

The South Korean government has yet to respond to Wednesday's report.
Posted by:Skidmark

#2  ...few families were keen on adopting children.

Koreans wouldn't adopt 'out of blood' (aka kin) children. A long cultural tradition. If Koreans wouldn't adopt them, someone else would. There is also the racial stigma with a lot of GI babies.

I know we're supposed to treat them as an ally, but have no conviction about any Asian countries. They have no real conviction about right and wrong, good or evil, God or other. They do what they wish to do.

Applies across the board. We may have shared common interest, that's about it. Witness the UK, Canada, Australia throwing out hundreds of years of English laws and rights happening right now.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2025-03-27 08:13  

#1  I know we're supposed to treat them as an ally, but have no conviction about any Asian countries. They have no real conviction about right and wrong, good or evil, God or other. They do what they wish to do.
Posted by: Crusader   2025-03-27 00:34  

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