International adoptions from Taiwan are conducted according to the Hague Adoption Convention and no reports of illegal cases have been received, the Ministry of Health and Welfare said yesterday after Norway and Denmark on Tuesday suspended international adoption from several countries, including Taiwan, pending an investigation into alleged illegal operations.
Social and Family Affairs Administration Director Chien Hui-chuan (簡慧娟) said that 215 children were adopted in Taiwan in 2022, with 110 of them international adoptions, including 62 to the US, 15 to Sweden, 10 to the Netherlands, and one each to Norway and Denmark.
Adoption policies have been adjusted in the past few years, prioritizing keeping the child in the care of their birth family, and only finding a suitable adoption family as a last resort, Chien said, adding that local adoption is prioritized.
Photo: CNA
However, as is common in adoptions, institutes find it difficult to place older children locally, so most are adopted by families in other countries, she said.
Chien said she has heard that some European countries planned to reduce international adoptions, but Taiwan has always conformed to the Hague Adoption Convention for international adoptions.
The ministry has not received any report from other countries about alleged illegal adoptions from Taiwan, she added.
Social and Family Affairs Administration Deputy Director Chang Mei-mei (張美美) said that adoption agencies in Taiwan must have a permit and follow specific procedures, including receiving government approval to work with adoption agencies in other countries, having social workers evaluate prospective adoptive families, handing over the families’ information to the courts and obtaining a judge’s approval before an adoption can proceed.
Child Welfare League Foundation specialist Li Fang-ling (李芳玲) said local regulations stipulate that adoption procedures must be carried out between agencies and only the foundation has registered links in Norway.
Fifteen Taiwanese children have been adopted to Norway since 2015, with the most recent in 2022, Li said.
Norway’s top body for international adoptions on Tuesday recommended a halt to all adoptions from abroad for two years pending an investigation into allegedly illegal cases, while Denmark’s sole overseas adoption agency announced it was stopping such operations, citing similar concerns.
The Norwegian Directorate for Children, Youth and Family Affairs said that families already assigned a child from Taiwan, Bulgaria, Colombia, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Peru, the Philippines, South Africa or Thailand would be allowed to complete the adoption process, but only after an assessment by the agency.
Couples who received approval to adopt from South Korea would also be permitted to proceed when matched with a child, it said.
A majority of the children adopted in Norway are from Taiwan, Colombia, the Philippines, South Korea or Thailand, national statistics showed.
Denmark’s only overseas adoption agency on Tuesday said that it is “winding down” its facilitation of international adoptions after a government agency raised concerns over fabricated documents and procedures that obscured children’s biological origins abroad.
The privately run Danish International Adoption has mediated adoptions in Taiwan, the Czech Republic, India, the Philippines, South Africa and Thailand.
Last month, an appeals board suspended its work in South Africa because of questions about the agency’s adherence to legal standards.
The Danish agency said it was getting out of the international adoption business on the same day that Norway announced the two-year hiatus.
Additional reporting by AP
A Chinese freighter that allegedly snapped an undersea cable linking Taiwan proper to Penghu County is suspected of being owned by a Chinese state-run company and had docked at the ports of Kaohsiung and Keelung for three months using different names. On Tuesday last week, the Togo-flagged freighter Hong Tai 58 (宏泰58號) and its Chinese crew were detained after the Taipei-Penghu No. 3 submarine cable was severed. When the Coast Guard Administration (CGA) first attempted to detain the ship on grounds of possible sabotage, its crew said the ship’s name was Hong Tai 168, although the Automatic Identification System (AIS)
An Akizuki-class destroyer last month made the first-ever solo transit of a Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force ship through the Taiwan Strait, Japanese government officials with knowledge of the matter said yesterday. The JS Akizuki carried out a north-to-south transit through the Taiwan Strait on Feb. 5 as it sailed to the South China Sea to participate in a joint exercise with US, Australian and Philippine forces that day. The Japanese destroyer JS Sazanami in September last year made the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force’s first-ever transit through the Taiwan Strait, but it was joined by vessels from New Zealand and Australia,
CHANGE OF MIND: The Chinese crew at first showed a willingness to cooperate, but later regretted that when the ship arrived at the port and refused to enter Togolese Republic-registered Chinese freighter Hong Tai (宏泰號) and its crew have been detained on suspicion of deliberately damaging a submarine cable connecting Taiwan proper and Penghu County, the Coast Guard Administration said in a statement yesterday. The case would be subject to a “national security-level investigation” by the Tainan District Prosecutors’ Office, it added. The administration said that it had been monitoring the ship since 7:10pm on Saturday when it appeared to be loitering in waters about 6 nautical miles (11km) northwest of Tainan’s Chiang Chun Fishing Port, adding that the ship’s location was about 0.5 nautical miles north of the No.
SECURITY: The purpose for giving Hong Kong and Macau residents more lenient paths to permanent residency no longer applies due to China’s policies, a source said The government is considering removing an optional path to citizenship for residents from Hong Kong and Macau, and lengthening the terms for permanent residence eligibility, a source said yesterday. In a bid to prevent the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) from infiltrating Taiwan through immigration from Hong Kong and Macau, the government could amend immigration laws for residents of the territories who currently receive preferential treatment, an official familiar with the matter speaking on condition of anonymity said. The move was part of “national security-related legislative reform,” they added. Under the amendments, arrivals from the Chinese territories would have to reside in Taiwan for