A South Korea commission has highlighted a foreign-adoption programme in the 1970s and 1980s that was rife with fraud and abuse, and the role of military governments in permitting the large-scale overseas placements of children.
The commission has concluded the government bears responsibility for the programme, driven by efforts to reduce welfare costs and enabled by private agencies that often manipulated children’s backgrounds and origins.
The report followed a nearly three-year investigation into complaints from 367 adoptees in Europe, the United States, and Australia.
The investigation represented the most comprehensive examination yet of South Korea’s foreign adoptions, which peaked under a succession of military governments in the 1970s and 1980s.
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The Truth and Reconciliation Commission, a government-appointed fact-finding panel, said it confirmed human rights violations in 56 of the complaints and aims to review the remaining cases before its mandate expires in late May.
However, some adoptees and even a senior investigator on the commission criticised the cautiously written report, acknowledging that investigative limitations prevented the commission from more strongly establishing the government’s complicity.
Most Korean adoptees were registered by agencies as abandoned orphans – although they frequently had relatives who could be easily identified or found – a practice that often makes their roots difficult or impossible to trace.
Government data shows less than a fifth of 15,000 adoptees who have asked South Korea for help with family searches since 2012 have managed to reunite with relatives.
After reviewing government and adoption records and interviewing adoptees, birth families, public officials and adoption workers, the commission assessed that South Korean officials saw foreign adoptions as a cheaper alternative to building a social welfare system for needy children, including those born to poor parents or unwed mothers.
Through policies and laws that promoted adoption, South Korea’s military governments permitted private adoption agencies to exercise extensive guardianship rights over children in their possession and swiftly transfer custody to foreign adopters, resulting in “large-scale overseas placements of children in need of protection,” the commission said.
Authorities provided no meaningful oversight as adoption agencies engaged in dubious or illicit practices while competing to send more children abroad.
These practices included bypassing proper consent from biological parents, falsely documenting children with known parents as abandoned orphans, and switching children’s identities, according to the commission’s report.
It cited that the government failed to ensure that agencies properly screened adoptive parents or prevent them from excessively charging foreign adopters, who were often asked to make additional donations beyond the standard fees.
The commission recommended the South Korean government issue an official apology over the problems it identified and develop plans to address the grievances of adoptees who discovered that the biological origins in their adoption papers were falsified.
It also urged the government to investigate citizenship gaps among adoptees sent to the United States, the largest recipient of Korean children by far, and to implement measures to assist those without citizenship, who may number in the thousands.
South Korea’s government has never acknowledged direct responsibility for issues surrounding past adoptions, which have drawn growing international attention amid criticism that thousands of children were carelessly or unnecessarily separated from their biological families.
The Ministry of Health and Welfare, the government department that handles adoption issues, did not immediately comment on the commission’s report.
Around 200,000 South Koreans were adopted to western countries in the past seven decades, forming what is believed to be the world’s largest diaspora of adoptees.
Most were placed with white parents in the United States and Europe during the 1970-80s.
South Korea’s then-military leaders focused on economic growth and saw adoptions as a tool to reduce welfare burdens, erase the “social problem” of unwed mothers and deepen ties with the democratic West.
The military governments implemented special laws aimed at promoting foreign adoptions, removing judicial oversight and granting vast powers to the heads of private agencies, which bypassed proper child relinquishment practices while shipping thousands of children to the west every year.
Recent reforms, including a 2011 law that reinstated judicial oversight by requiring foreign adoptions to go through family courts, have led to a significant decline in the overseas placements of South Korean children, with only 79 cases in 2023. – AP