Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Americans’ overseas adoptions drop again

- DAVID CRARY

NEW YORK — The number of foreign children adopted by U.S. parents dropped more than 12 percent last year, accelerati­ng a decline that’s now continued for 13 years, according to new State Department figures.

Sharp drops in adoptions from China and the Democratic Republic of Congo more than offset notable increases from many countries, including India, Colombia and Nigeria.

The department’s report for fiscal 2017, released Friday, shows 4,714 adoptions from abroad, down from 5,372 in 2016 and nearly 80 percent below the high of 22,884 in 2004. The number has fallen every year since then.

China, as has been the case for several years, accounted for the most children adopted in the U.S. by far. But its total of 1,905 was down nearly 15 percent from 2016 and far below a peak of 7,903 in 2005.

Suzanne Lawrence, the State Department’s special adviser on matters regarding children, attributed the lower numbers to increased interest in domestic adoption among China’s growing middle class. She also said new Chinese regulation­s affecting nongovernm­ental organizati­ons had disrupted partnershi­ps involving some U.S. adoption agencies.

In 2016, Congo was second after China, accounting for 359 adoptions. The number fell to four in 2017 as the Congolese government — which has been concerned about adoption fraud — halted internatio­nal adoptions pending a possible overhaul of regulation­s.

Replacing Congo as No. 2 in the new report was Ethiopia, accounting for 313 adoptions. It was followed by South Korea, Haiti, India, Ukraine, Colombia and Nigeria.

For a third-straight year, there were no adoptions from Russia, which once accounted for hundreds of U.S. adoptions annually but imposed a ban that fully took effect in 2014. The ban served as retaliatio­n for a U.S. law targeting alleged Russian human-rights violators.

According to the new report, 83 children were adopted from the United States to seven foreign countries, including 41 to Canada and 20 to the Netherland­s.

Lawrence noted that internatio­nal adoptions have been declining worldwide and said the United States accounts for half of the total, including large numbers of children with special medical and psychologi­cal needs.

However, the National Council for Adoption, and many of the adoption agencies it represents, have faulted the State Department for failing to reverse the decline in foreign adoptions. This constituen­cy has decried a newly implemente­d accreditin­g system that will subject them to tighter monitoring and oversight and raise fees either for the agencies or for the families they serve.

“The number of orphaned, abandoned, and relinquish­ed children worldwide continues to grow, yet internatio­nal adoptions continue to decline,” Chuck Johnson, chief executive of the adoption council, said in an email. “Does the number have to reach zero before top officials at the Department of State will admit that their policies are failing children miserably?”

Johnson called on Congress and President Donald Trump’s administra­tion to investigat­e whether officials in the department’s Office of Children’s Issues were “purposeful­ly sabotaging intercount­ry adoption.”

Thus far, the State Department has taken a tough stance in the face of such criticism, warning that foreign adoptions by U.S. families might grind to a halt if the new accreditin­g system is disrupted.

Assistant Secretary of State Carl Risch, whose dossier includes the Office of Children’s Issues, issued a statement Thursday saying efforts to maintain internatio­nal adoption as a viable option “are greatly undermined when foreign countries lose trust in our accreditat­ion system.”

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