Investigation into role of government in illegal adoptions abroad

www.rd.nl
29 January 2021

The investigation into the possible role of the Dutch government in illegal adoptions from abroad between 1967 and 1998 has been completed. The report of the Intercountry Adoption Research Committee will be published on Monday 8 February. On that day, the committee will hand over the investigation to Minister for Legal Protection Sander Dekker. He commissioned an investigation into possible wrongdoing in international adoptions.

The committee focuses on adoptions from Bangladesh, Brazil, Sri Lanka, Indonesia and Colombia. Illegal adoptions may have been made at that time involving Dutch government officials. Earlier, according to Dekker, it had already been shown that this may have been the case with illegal adoptions from Brazil in the 1970s and 1980s. That's why he set up the committee.

The researchers were given access to all information about the adoptions and were allowed to interrogate involved (former) officials. They also sent a questionnaire to a large number of Dutch adopted from abroad. The report was actually due on October 1, 2020, but due to the corona virus, the committee did not meet that deadline. For example, it was not possible to go abroad for research.

Tjibbe Joustra, former chairman of the Dutch Safety Board (OVV), is leading the investigation. Beatrice de Graaf and Bert-Jan Houtzagers are also on the committee. De Graaf is a terrorism expert and professor of the history of international relations at Utrecht University. Houtzagers works at the Council of State.

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