UPI en Español  |   UPI Asia  |   About UPI  |   My Account
Search:
Go

Parents: Chinese officials took babies

|
 
Published: Sept. 20, 2009 at 1:25 PM

TIANXI, China, Sept. 20 (UPI) -- Chinese parents say they have been forced by local officials to give up children for adoption if they violated the country's restrictions on family size.

After years of silence, parents are coming forward to say their children were taken by greedy officials seeking to claim up to $3,000 per child in adoption fees, the Los Angeles Times reported Sunday.

One of the parents, Yang Shuiying of the southern province of Guizhou, told the newspaper she was unaware of laws barring such actions when a local official showed up at her door five years ago and took away her 4-month-old daughter, saying he would spare her the fine for violating China's one-child policy. But, Yang told the Times, the man also warned her not to tell anyone what he had done.

Ina Hut, who last month resigned as the head of the Netherlands' largest adoption agency out of concern about baby trafficking, told the Times, "In the beginning, I think, adoption from China was a very good thing because there were so many abandoned girls. But then it became a supply-and-demand-driven market and a lot of people at the local level were making too much money."

© 2009 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Any reproduction, republication, redistribution and/or modification of any UPI content is expressly prohibited without UPI's prior written consent.

Order reprints
Join the conversation
Most Popular Collections
'Star Trek Into Darkness' screening NBC upfronts Met Ball 2013
'Great Gatsby' premieres in New York Spire raised on top of One WTC 2013: Celebrity break ups and divorces
Additional Top News Stories
1 of 16
Flags-In Ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery
View Caption
Staff Sgt. Jeffrey Roskos with the 3rd U.S. Infantry Regiment, "The Old Guard," participates in the annual Flags-In ceremony, May 23, 2013, at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia. Soldiers place American flags in front of more than 260,000 gravestones in the cemetery in honor of Memorial Day. UPI/Kevin Dietsch
fark
Everyone's used to gas prices climbing up on the Memorial Day weekend, but now they're faced with...
#26minutes
If train A leaves the station at 7:45 AM traveling east at 45 mph and train B leaves a different...
Top 10 new species revealed. Behold the blue-balled monkey
Plagiarism, sex in conference rooms, wandering the halls socializing. Sometimes there aren't enough...
Experts say that U.S. schools should make physical education a core subject. Probably because most...