Chinese orphanages buying babies for foreign adoption, investigation finds UPDATED

By on 10-14-2011 in China, International Adoption, Trafficking

Chinese orphanages buying babies for foreign adoption, investigation finds UPDATED

On Tuesday, we brought you the story of China’s Missing Children. Yesterday, we posted about how information was available two years ago. Now Sky News has conducted an investigation that further supports trafficking for international adoption in China is going on right now.

“[A]n undercover investigation by Sky found more than one government orphanage that would happily buy a baby that could have been kidnapped.

Though some orphanages said they no longer paid money for children, one worker at an orphanage in Hunan Province said they would pay £300 ($472) for a baby. The child required no identification.

“We’ll arrange to meet somewhere at 4:00am or 5:00am, you abandon the baby there, and then I’ll pick her up. That’s how it works,” she told Sky, during a recorded telephone call. When asked where the child would end up, she said that most adoptive couples were foreign. Chinese families, she said, were “not rich enough.”

The investigation follows claims by several Chinese families that their children were seized by government officials against their will and later adopted by foreigners.”

Yuan Zanhua said her 18-month-old daughter Xiao Fang was taken by local officials because she and her husband already had four children and were in breach of the country’s one-child rule.

Confiscating a child is illegal in China, where the law stipulates a fine for those who break the country’s family planning regulations.

“I’ve been to the family planning office to ask for my daughter several times,” she told Sky. “That’s all I want.”

Yuan and her husband believe that a photograph briefly posted on the website of an American adoption agency is Xiao Fang. But they have no way of contacting her, and local officials have told them to stay silent on the matter.

Several other families in the village also say they watched powerlessly as officials seized their children. It is thought they were all taken to the local orphanage, which has sent several hundred children for international adoption.

Following a report by Chinese journalists, the Chinese government finally investigated the case and punished 12 officials for “negligence.” However, no effort has been made to assist the parents in tracing their lost children.

Foreign couples who adopt in China must pay a “voluntary donation” of around £2,000 to authorities. Most of the money goes directly to the state-run orphanage that has cared for the child.

Neither the China Centre of Adoption Affairs, nor the Chinese Ministry for Civil Affairs would respond to requests for an interview.”

Chinese orphanages buying babies for foreign adoption, investigation finds
[The Telegraph 10/14/11]

Update: The video from Sky News is included in the article below. One convicted child trafficker is interviewed. “Duan Yuelin was one of those convicted in the case, after he and his relatives sold 85 children to the orphanages for as little as £80 each. He believes all of the children were later given for foreign adoption. Supply couldn’t keep up with demand. If I didn’t have any babies, the orphanages would ring me and ask me to find more. Several orphanages would all want the same baby. I didn’t know who to give them to.” Duan Yuelin, convicted child trafficker states while laughing.

China Orphanages ‘Buy Babies’ For Adoption
[Sky News 10/14/11 by Holly Williams]

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