Text Only
Search

 
US Finds Fraud in Vietnam Adoptions


25 April 2008
Steinglass report - Download (MP3) audio clip
Steinglass report - Listen (MP3) audio clip

A new report by the U.S. Embassy in Vietnam says fraud is pervasive in the Vietnamese international adoption system. Matt Steinglass reports from Hanoi.

A staff member at the Tam Binh 1 Orphanage in Ho Chi Minh City, southern Vietnam, follows a toddler (file photo)
A staff member at the Tam Binh 1 Orphanage in Ho Chi Minh City, southern Vietnam, follows a toddler (file photo)
A nine-page report released Friday by the embassy charges that some Vietnamese orphanages pay parents to put their children up for adoption so the orphanages can obtain donations from foreign adoption agencies.

The report says some orphanage officials embezzle foreign agencies' contributions. It details specific cases in which police and hospitals have coerced parents, or put children up for adoption without their parents' consent.

The head of Vietnam's Department of International Adoptions, Vu Duc Long, categorically denies the charges.

Long says it is possible that some cases do not conform precisely to regulations, but that he can confirm there is no selling of babies.

Embassy spokeswoman Angela Aggeler says the U.S. stands by its report.

"The report that we produced on these adoption irregularities here in Vietnam is the result of months and months of investigations into hundreds of these adoption cases. And we have worked very, very hard to ensure that the findings are accurate. Because these are children. They're not commodities."

The U.S. is asking Vietnam to allow freer investigations and genetic testing to make sure people who give children up for adoption are really their parents.

U.S. adoptions from Vietnam had been on the rise, with over 300 so far this year. But the embassy now urges Americans not to initiate any adoptions from Vietnam until new measures to prevent fraud have been implemented.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Top Story
Obama Requests Changes to Afghan Options

  More Stories
Sri Lanka Military Chief Resigns  Audio Clip Available
First Recorded Dengue Fever Epidemic Hits Cape Verde  Audio Clip Available
German Defense Minister in Kabul to Meet Afghan, NATO Leaders
Obama Readies for First Asia Tour
N. Korea Says South Will Pay 'Expensive Price' for Naval Clash
China Rejects Human Rights Watch Report on Black Jails
Thasksin Delivers Speech in Phnom Penh
Clinton Vows Support for Philippine Typhoon  Recovery, Anti-Terrorism Fight  Audio Clip Available
Pakistan Seeks Role in US-Afghan Policy
Obama's Middle East Strategy Stalls
Zimbabwe Land Seizures Reportedly Intensify  Audio Clip Available