International adoptions of children from China have been
suspended indefinitely because of the SARS epidemic, the Chinese
government announced yesterday.
The government's China Center for Adoption Affairs posted the
notice on its Web site, delivering heartbreaking news to prospective
parents, some of whom had received photos of the children they were
on the verge of adopting.
"It's just an empty, horrible feeling," said Jaime Fall of Prince
William County, who was preparing to travel to Yunnan province in
southern China with his wife, Tammy, to pick up a baby girl.
Depending on its duration, the suspension also is an economic
blow to China's lucrative adoption business. More than 5,000
children were adopted by U.S. parents last year, making China the
largest source of international adoptions in the United States,
according to the State Department. In the past seven years, more
than 30,000 Chinese children have been brought to this country.
At the end of April -- more than a month after health alerts were
first sounded about severe acute respiratory syndrome -- the central
Chinese adoption agency shut down for nine days. But its public
notice at the time did not mention SARS and instead referred to the
May 1 national holiday, when businesses are traditionally closed,
and to the office being closed for renovations.
Yesterday's notice by the agency specifically referred to SARS
and said adoptions were being postponed to "avoid cross infection
that might be caused by a flow of people, and to guarantee the
health and safety of life for the parties of adoptive relations."
China's government is enforcing tougher measures to control SARS
and announced an intention to execute anyone who spreads the virus
deliberately.
Prospective parents have continued to travel to China since the
SARS outbreak, despite warnings from the World Health Organization
and the U.S. State Department. The Falls, who were expecting travel
documents to arrive from Beijing this week, said they are worried
that their 10-month-old daughter might get sick if she stays in
China.
"We don't know what the situation is where she is . . . if there
are people in the area with SARS or if there is good medical care
there," said Jaime Fall, 37.
The Beijing agency's decision means that no new referrals of
children will be made and no travel documents will be issued to
prospective parents until the suspension is lifted. The agency also
advised parents who have received paperwork to postpone travel to
China.
U.S. officials say adoption decisions are ultimately up to the
Chinese government. The State Department handles only the processing
of visas for the children, and because of SARS it has relaxed rules
so that only one parent has to travel to Guangzhou -- where the SARS
outbreak was first reported -- for the visa.
Bethany Christian Services, a U.S. nonprofit agency that handles
more than 200 Chinese adoptions a year, said about eight of its
clients were expected to leave today for China. Bethany officials
hope that the latest news from Beijing will not affect those
families, who have travel documents in hand. But "it's day to day,"
said spokeswoman Dawn Dean.
David Schiff and Cathy Wollman of Rockville sent a jubilant
e-mail to friends this week, saying they would be boarding a flight
to China yesterday.
The couple, featured last month in a Washington Post article on
adoptions, had said the anxiety of waiting for their little girl was
worse than any fear of SARS. It was unclear whether the latest
announcement would affect their adoption, and efforts to reach them
and their adoption agency yesterday were unsuccessful.
Mary Chamberlain, director of the China adoptions program for
World Child International in Silver Spring, said the suspension
would affect about 10 families a month at her agency. She said many
prospective parents have mixed emotions; though saddened by the
delay in adoptions, they are relieved because the Chinese
government's announcement "takes the pressure off of them to make
the decision whether to travel or not," she said.
A few suspected SARS cases have been connected to adoption travel
to China, including the illness of a Millersville woman who was
quarantined in her home shortly after she returned and developed
symptoms. A baby in Florida and another in Massachusetts were
classified as "probable" SARS cases by the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention in Atlanta.
Since the relaxation of adoption laws by Beijing in the
mid-1990s, adoptions have become an economic boon for the Chinese
government while helping to relieve one of the nation's most
difficult social quandaries. Because of China's one-child policy for
population control and the traditional preference of Chinese
families for male children, thousands of baby girls are abandoned
each year.
Families pay as much as $15,000 for an adoption, with about
$3,000 to $5,000 as a mandatory "donation" to the orphanage. Hotels
and stores have been built around Guangzhou to cater to the
thousands of Americans who come through the city to get their visas
processed at the U.S. consulate there.
Western officials have also said that the media scrutiny given to
international adoptions and the generosity of adoptive parents, who
often donate goods to orphanages, have helped improve living
conditions in once-crowded orphanages.
In recent years, China has developed a reputation among U.S.
adoption agencies as being organized and efficient. Some adoption
directors say Chinese officials have worked hard to match up babies
to parents -- even, for example, placing a baby who responds to
music with parents who are musicians.