“I don’t even know when I was born,” said May-Britt Koed, a Copenhagen restaurant owner and one of the 250,000 South Korean babies sent abroad for adoption since the 1950s.
Her adoption files contain two different birth dates months apart, which Koed suspects means she might have been exchanged for another baby who did not survive.
Experts say even the chubby baby picture sent to her Danish adoptive parents might not have been of her.
Photo: AFP
All the 47-year-old knows for sure is that “I arrived in Denmark on May 17, 1977.”
Koed’s case is far from isolated. The growing scandal over falsified records has prompted the South Korean Truth and Reconciliation Commission to look at hundreds of cases from the country’s “baby farm” adoption industry that ended in the late 1980s.
Koed said that her Danish Korean Rights Group has seen hundreds of files containing falsified documents, with some babies arriving in Denmark 6cm shorter than they were in their South Korea files.
A January report for the Danish Ministry of Social Affairs found that some adoption agencies, operating under Danish state control, knew that their South Korean partners were changing children’s identities in the 1970s and 1980s.
More worrying still, “it’s been documented that letters were being sent from [birth] parents who didn’t know where their children were,” said Marya Akhtar of the Danish Institute for Human Rights. “And allegedly it looks like they were in the possession of authorities in Denmark.”
“Why didn’t anything happen? We call for a thorough examination,” Akhtar told reporters.
Danish adoption agencies also reportedly paid about 54 million kroner (US$7.9 million) to South Korean orphanages and other bodies to facilitate the adoptions, according to media investigations.
Denmark suspended all international adoptions in January amid serious concerns over babies also brought from other countries, including India and South Africa.
“It’s like opening Pandora’s box,” Koed told reporters.
“We are at a point where we can see that the Danish government has been involved,” said Koed, whose group has called for an independent Danish commission into the trade.
“Everybody deserves to have that truth, especially the adoptees that are trying to piece together their own history,” she said. “I haven’t searched for a biological family, I’m not sure I’m going to. I am doing this to discover the truth of what happened to all of us and to find out who is responsible.”
Time is of the essence for those who want to trace their biological families, with some already learning that their parents are dead, she said.
Copenhagen’s freeze on international adoptions came after the last agency operating there closed down amid revelations of financial pressure and fraudulently acquired consent — not only in South Korea, but also in India, Madagascar and South Africa.
Brothers and sisters were separated and sometimes adopted to different countries.
Danish Minister of Social Affairs Pernille Rosenkrantz-Theil said that there was “too high a risk of human trafficking or child theft.”
Last year she promised an inquiry into the history of international adoption procedures.
Legal expert Klaus Josephsen, a lecturer at the University of Aarhus, said that there “hasn’t been enough control” of the system in Denmark.
“We have a private organization, which has handled and taken care of those adoptions,” Josephsen said. “They found children then created the papers and sent them to the Danish authorities.”
“We will not see those organizations anymore, because the government doesn’t trust them,” he said. “So I think we will get a new system, where the state will be active.”
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