ADVERTISEMENT

Authorities to let 150 adopted children leave country after two-year wait

"The dossiers that were released ... it was mostly American children," Luwara said, adding that the commission will consider about 900 more foreign adoption cases and plans to complete its work next month.

Abandoned children play at the Don Bosco Ngangi community center in Goma, North Kivu region, August 6, 2013. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya

Democratic Republic of Congo will allow some 150 children adopted by foreign parents, mostly Americans, to leave the country after spending more than two years in legal limbo, the interior ministry said on Monday.

In 2013, Congo imposed a moratorium on exit visas to children adopted by foreign parents, citing fears that the children could be abused or trafficked. The government has also voiced concerns about adoptions by gay couples.

Congo became a favoured international adoption destination in recent years because it has more than 4 million orphaned children, according to the U.N. children's agency UNICEF, as well as lax regulation.

The central African nation is mineral-rich but deeply impoverished. It has suffered through two civil wars and armed groups continue to plague its eastern region.

ADVERTISEMENT

Between 2010 and 2013, U.S. adoptions from Congo rose 645 percent, the U.S. Department of State said.

Interior ministry spokesman Claude Pero Luwara said an inter-ministerial commission had approved the exit visas. In November, the commission signed off on exit visas for about 70 children adopted by European, Canadian and American families.

Congo's government has come under intense pressure from those countries' governments to lift the suspension.

Parliament is expected to take up a bill this year to lift the moratorium and regulate foreign adoptions.

The U.S. Embassy in the capital Kinshasa could not immediately confirm the interior ministry's statement.

ADVERTISEMENT

A Thomson Reuters Foundation investigation in October found that the ban had spurred a black market in child smuggling, with more than 80 adopted Congolese children illegally transported out of the country and to the United States.

JOIN OUR PULSE COMMUNITY!

Unblock notifications in browser settings.
ADVERTISEMENT

Eyewitness? Submit your stories now via social or:

Email: eyewitness@pulse.ng

Recommended articles

33 states at high risk of flooding problems between July and September

33 states at high risk of flooding problems between July and September

71-year-old Putin extends reign as Russian president to 2030, sworn in for 5th term

71-year-old Putin extends reign as Russian president to 2030, sworn in for 5th term

Sanwo-Olu wants Lagosians to be friendly to corps members

Sanwo-Olu wants Lagosians to be friendly to corps members

Governor Adeleke vows to invest in Ile-Ife and restore its lost glory

Governor Adeleke vows to invest in Ile-Ife and restore its lost glory

Tech industry gets green push as NGO unveils eco-friendly initiative

Tech industry gets green push as NGO unveils eco-friendly initiative

Senate creates committee to investigate Abuja Centenary City project delay

Senate creates committee to investigate Abuja Centenary City project delay

NNPC assures over 30-day fuel supply, urges motorists against panic buying

NNPC assures over 30-day fuel supply, urges motorists against panic buying

Presidency gives fresh update on Tinubu's return date from foreign trip

Presidency gives fresh update on Tinubu's return date from foreign trip

Adeleke laments poor infrastructure, promises to revive Ile-Ife's legacy

Adeleke laments poor infrastructure, promises to revive Ile-Ife's legacy

Pulse Sports

Chelsea set to offer Romelu Lukaku and cash for Super Eagles star Victor Osimhen

Chelsea set to offer Romelu Lukaku and cash for Super Eagles star Victor Osimhen

Mikel Obi: Super Eagles legend goes viral speaking Hausa

Mikel Obi: Super Eagles legend goes viral speaking Hausa

Anthony Joshua: Nigerian-born boxer teams up with Mariah Carey, Naomi Campbell and Cuppy in France

Anthony Joshua: Nigerian-born boxer teams up with Mariah Carey, Naomi Campbell and Cuppy in France

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT