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Netherlands Moves To Ban All International Adoptions

Dutch adoption policies came under scrutiny after increasing numbers of adults who had been adopted found that their birth documents had been forged or lost, or that their adoption had been illegal.

AMSTERDAM: The Netherlands will no longer permit its citizens to adopt children from foreign countries, the government said on Tuesday.

Minister for Legal Protection Franc Weerwind added that intercountry procedures that already started will continue for the time being.

Dutch parents adopted around 40,000 children from 80 countries in the previous half-century. The practice has declined in recent years, with just 145 children adopted in 2019. This dropped to 70 in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the independent Dutch Youth Institute think tank.

After a report flagged irregularities in the system, the Netherlands froze international adoptions in February 2021. The report said that some children had apparently been stolen or bought from their birth parents in cases going back to the 1960s. It also slammed authorities for the lack of care in transnational adoption processes.

Adopted children in the country tracing their roots often found that their documents had been forged or lost, or that their adoption was illegal.

Between February 2021 and November 2022, the Dutch government had already implemented a freeze of almost two years on intercountry adoptions.

At the time, the government stated it would stop adoptions from China and the US. Authorities added that they would also halt adoptions from Haiti, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Peru, Colombia and Burkina Faso.

Authorities currently only permit adoption from eight countries – the Philippines, Hungary, Lesotho, Taiwan, Thailand, South Africa, Bulgaria and Portugal. Now they have stopped this as well.

(REUTERS)

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Ramananda Sengupta
In a career spanning three decades and counting, Ramananda (Ram to his friends) has been the foreign editor of The Telegraph, Outlook Magazine and the New Indian Express. He helped set up rediff.com’s editorial operations in San Jose and New York, helmed sify.com, and was the founder editor of India.com. His work has featured in national and international publications like the Al Jazeera Centre for Studies, Global Times and Ashahi Shimbun. But his one constant over all these years, he says, has been the attempt to understand rising India’s place in the world. He can rustle up a mean salad, his oil-less pepper chicken is to die for, and all it takes is some beer and rhythm and blues to rock his soul. Talk to him about foreign and strategic affairs, media, South Asia, China, and of course India.