UK Prime Minister Issues Apology for Historical Forced Adoptions
In a formal statement, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer has issued a profound apology regarding the forced adoption practices that occurred between 1949 and 1976. This period saw an estimated 185,000 children forcibly adopted, an action described by Starmer as a “stain on our history.” The state and religious institutions, particularly Christian churches, played a significant role in coercing young mothers, many of them teenagers, into giving up their children.
Starmer expressed deep remorse to all affected individuals and acknowledged systemic failures across multiple layers of public and private sectors, including local authorities and faith-based institutions. In a gesture towards reconciliation, the government has allocated £4 million to facilitate access to adoption records and support services for reconnection efforts, as well as to fund research into the long-term effects of forced adoptions on victims.
The apology follows recent acknowledgments by the Church of England and aligns with previous apologies by Australia in 2013 and Ireland in 2021. The British government’s contrition echoes recommendations from a parliamentary committee investigation that documented a range of abuses, including the cruel treatment and punishment of mothers during childbirth.