Korea Should Care about Domestic Adoption: U.S. Envoy | Be Korea-savvy

Korea Should Care about Domestic Adoption: U.S. Envoy


Holt International Children's Services, an international adoption agency, marks 60th anniversary of its foundation. (Image courtesy of Yonhap)

Holt International Children’s Services, an international adoption agency, marks 60th anniversary of its foundation. (Image courtesy of Yonhap)

“I fully respect that now Korea is a first world country and that the people who live here, they should be able to take care of the children that are born here.”

“Korea made a decision to decrease the number of intercountry adoptions every year. But we understand now that while the number of intercountry adoptions has certainly gone down, the number of domestic adoptions has also decreased.”

– Ambassador Susan Jacobs, U.S. State Department special adviser for children’s issues,  at a press conference at the U.S. Embassy located in central Seoul

SEOUL, Oct. 16 (Korea Bizwire) – A top U.S. envoy on children’s issues urged South Korea Friday to enhance efforts to support families and promote domestic adoption.

“Korea didn’t have a bad reputation as an exporter of children. It’s just a place where at the beginning there were children who needed permanency and could find it outside Korea,” she said.

Jacobs is in Seoul to participate in an international conference celebrating the 60th anniversary of Holt Children’s Services Inc., an international adoption agency.

South Korea began sending children abroad for adoption in 1955, two years after the end of the three-year Korean War.

Jacobs underlined the importance of the South Korean government’s effort to support domestic families in terms of ways to reunite them and to “take the shame out of adopting a child or giving up a child because they are not able to take care of it.”

In 2013, South Korea joined the Hague Convention on the Protection of Children and Co-operation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption, an international treaty on adoption to provide protection for children, but has not ratified it yet.

On Saturday, Jacobs is set to leave for Washington, ending her three-nation Asian tour, which also took her to Cambodia and Vietnam.

(Yonhap)

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