Fiji Sun

Sri Lanka Admits To Massive ‘Baby Farm’ Adoption Schemes

- dw.com

Dutch investigat­ive journalist­s have said that at least 11,000 babies adopted by foreign couples were either bought or stolen from their parents. Authoritie­s in Sri Lanka and the Netherland­s have launched investigat­ions.

The government of Sri Lanka has acknowledg­ed that some 11,000 babies adopted by foreigners in the 1980s were likely either bought or stolen from their biological parents.

Health Minister Rajitha Senaratne told the Dutch documentar­y series Zembla, which aired an investigat­ion on the issue in the Netherland­s on Wednesday, that the government was launching an inquiry into the matter and would set up a DNA database to help families search for their relatives.

“The government takes this matter very seriously,” Dutch daily Algemeen Dagblad quoted Senaratne as saying. “This is a violation of the human rights of the familes.” According to Zembla, the schemes were so widespread that they not only included intentiona­lly impregnati­ng women at so-called “baby farms,” but even stealing babies from hospitals. As one mother told the programme, she was told that her baby died shortly after birth — although one of her relatives saw a doctor leave the hospital with the child shortly thereafter. Criminal syndicates would sometimes hire “actor mothers” to pretend to be a child’s biological mother for the foreign couples, most them from Netherland­s — but many also from the United Kingdom, Sweden and Germany. Some of these fake mothers said they were paid by hospital employees. Zembla also claims that Dutch records of Sri Lankan adoptions were sometimes falsified to cover up the dubious nature of the transactio­n. Crimes of this type were widespread in Sri Lanka during the 1980s, until a 1987 raid on a baby farm found 22 women and 20 infants living in “prison-like” surroundin­gs and adoptions in the country dropped significan­tly.

 ??  ?? Crimes of this type were widespread in Sri Lanka during the 1980s.
Crimes of this type were widespread in Sri Lanka during the 1980s.

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