ADOPTION ENQUIRY
South Korea sent more than 140,000 children overseas for adoption between 1955 and 1999, according to an official enquiry in the country.
In October 2025, Seoul apologised for the first time for state-sanctioned malpractices, saying “unjust human rights violations” were committed.
Between 1970 and 1989, 7,220 South Korean children were adopted in Denmark, almost all of whom were told they were street orphans.
Enquiries have proven otherwise, indicating that South Korean children in orphanages were given away for adoption without their families’ consent.
A 2024 report by the National Social Appeals Board showed that Denmark’s state-run adoption agencies knew their South Korean partners sometimes changed children’s identities.
According to Danish media reports, the Danish agencies paid around 54 million kroner (US$8.4 million) to facilitate the adoptions.
“As a Dane, I believed that Denmark was on the side of the good and that Korea, as a former dictatorship, was on the side of the bad guys,” said Peter Moller, who heads an association defending the rights of South Korean adoptees that is not part of the lawsuit against the Danish state.
“But Korea had the courage to look what it had done straight in the eye” while “Denmark prefers to sweep everything under the rug”, he said.
ADOPTEE FINDS FATHER
Sidse Koch Jorgensen, a 53-year-old physiotherapist and adoptee, is angry.
“It’s a human right to know your identity and also to have the possibility to have contact with your biological family,” she fumed.
The inaccuracies in her adoption papers prevented that for years, but she is now nearing the end of her quest, which began with a first trip to South Korea in 2013.
“One month before I was to leave, I got an email saying they found my dad,” she said. “It was a shock.”
She met him during her visit, and discovered that the real circumstances about her separation from her biological family were very different from what her adoption papers said.
While her father was out of the country, her mother sent her to a “camp” to be cared for without his consent. Instead of being kept there, the child was sent to Denmark for adoption.
“I want the Danish government to take responsibility for showing so much neglect,” Jorgensen added.
“They were the authorities who were supposed to check everything, to get some insight if there were any concerns.”
The plaintiffs have each sought 250,000 kroner (US$38,800) in damages.
Contacted by AFP, the Danish social affairs ministry declined to comment.
Denmark froze international adoptions in 2024 after a number of serious problems with international adoption practices came to light.

