From Orphan to Activist, Art by Lisa Wool-Rim Sjöblom

In Response to Reuters: South Korea Committed Rights Violation During Overseas Adoptions

In All, Global Adoption News, In Response To..., Korea Adoptees Worldwide News Articles by KAW

Reuters: Truth & Reconciliation Commission Investigation Finds

SEOUL, March 26 (Reuters) – South Korean adoption agencies sent children abroad like “luggage” for decades, labelling some as orphans when they had parents and sending alternative babies when infants had died before heading overseas, a truth commission said on Wednesday.
After a 2-year inquiry, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which was empowered by parliament, recommended the government make an official apology, carry out follow-up investigations and put relief measures in place for victims.
It said it found human rights violations in the cases of at least 56 adoptees from a petition filed by 367 adoptees sent overseas between 1964 and 1999 to 11 countries including the United States, France, Denmark and Sweden.
The "Unknown" Culture Club: Korean Adoptees, Then and Now, compiled by the Vance Twins and Katherine Kim, Art by Lisa Wool-Rim Sjöblom

The “Unknown” Culture Club: Korean Adoptees, Then and Now, compiled by the Vance Twins and Katherine Kim, Art by Lisa Wool-Rim Sjöblom

In presenting its findings, it published a picture of babies wrapped in blankets and strapped into seats on an airliner in 1984, with the title “Children sent abroad like luggage”.

It noted South Korean adoption agencies complied with foreign agencies’ demands to send a set number of children each month.
“For nearly 50 years following the Korean War, the government prioritised intercountry adoption as a cost-effective alternative to strengthening domestic child welfare policies,” the commission said.
It said the government had neglected its responsibility to provide oversight and block “misconduct by adoption agencies,” such as fraudulent orphan registrations, identity tampering, and inadequate vetting of adoptive parents.
The office of South Korea’s acting president could not be immediately reached for comment on its report.
Besides recommending an official apology, the commission also called for a comprehensive survey on adoptees’ citizenship status and any corresponding policy measures, remedies for victims whose identities were falsified, a prompt ratification of the Hague Adoption Convention, and to ensure a commitment from adoption agencies to restore adoptees’ rights.
“These violations should never have occurred,” said Park Sun-young, chairperson of the commission. “We must come together-adoptive countries and adoptees alike-to address the identity crises many adoptees face.”