Review of child adoption process sought to curb trafficking of infants | Inquirer News

Review of child adoption process sought to curb trafficking of infants

/ 11:26 AM December 04, 2019

MANILA, Philippines — The alarming prevalence of “baby-for-sale” cases should prompt a comprehensive review of the adoption process and anti-trafficking laws in the Philippines, detained Sen. Leila de Lima said Wednesday. “Assessments from experts point out that one of the problem areas that exacerbate the baby-for-sale trade is the adoption system in the Philippines,” De Lima, chairperson of the Senate Committee on Social Justice, Welfare and Rural Development said in a statement. De Lima further lamented that the current system remained to be “tedious, multilayered, and highly bureaucratic, and even takes years to process.”

In February this year, the Simulated Birth Rectification Act simplifying the adoption process in the country was signed into law.

Duterte signs law simplifying adoption process

The law allows the rectification of the simulated birth of a child if it was made for the best interest of the child. It defines birth simulation as the “tampering of the civil registry to make it appear in the record of birth that a child was born to a person who is not the child’s biological mother.”   Poverty and baby-trafficking De Lima, who earlier filed Senate Resolution No. 224 to probe the illegal trade that is being done through online and offline transactions, said poverty remains to be one of the main drivers in the prevalence of such illegal activity. Citing news reports, De Lima said a considerable number of infants are being sold both online and offline, for as little as P300 only across Southeast Asia, including the Philippines. In the Philippines, reports have revealed that babies are sold through online channels while offline transactions reportedly take place outside public hospitals and in slum communities, said De Lima.

In filing the Resolution, De Lima said the government should urgently address the issue as it may lead to more crimes, such as illicit human organ trade, sex trafficking, child pornography and other abuses against children.

GSG
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TAGS: adoption process, Anti-trafficking, Leila de Lima

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