MP who might have been victim of forced adoption calls for Government apology
Hundreds of thousands of children were given up for adoption between 1949 and 1976 in the UK.
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Your support makes all the difference.An SNP MP who believes he might have been a victim of forced adoption has called on the UK Government to formally apologise to the people affected by the āappallingā practice.
Chris Law told the Commons that despite the Welsh and Scottish Governments both issuing formal apologies, Westminster is āalways last to the table to accept state responsibility for the most vulnerable members of societyā.
The Dundee West MP said āI stand here as possibly one of those childrenā, adding that āforced adoption is not simply a historical injusticeā but āan ongoing injusticeā.
Hundreds of thousands of children were given up for adoption between 1949 and 1976 in the UK, at a time when unmarried mothers were often rejected by their families and ostracised by society.
Adoptions were generally handled through agencies run by the Church of England, the Roman Catholic Church and the Salvation Army.
Adoption is a form of state practice and it's the state who is responsible for setting standards and protecting people
Speaking at business questions, Mr Law said: āWhy is Westminster always last to the table to accept state responsibility for the most vulnerable members of society?
āBetween 1949-1976, an estimated quarter million children across these islands were taken from their mothers and fathers and forcibly adopted.
āI stand here as possibly one of those children.ā
He added: āDespite the Scottish and Welsh Governments issuing a formal apology, the UK Government stopped short and said we are sorry on behalf of society for what happened.
āAdoption is a form of state practice and itās the state who is responsible for setting standards and protecting people.
āForced adoption is not simply a historical injustice, itās an ongoing injustice.
āSo can we therefore have a statement in which the UK Government will finally issue a formal apology to those mothers, fathers and children who continue to be affected by what was an appalling practice?ā
Commons Leader Penny Mordaunt thanked Mr Law for raising the āimportant matterā and for sharing his personal experience, adding: āI shall make sure that the Cabinet Office have heard his concerns today.ā
Speaking to the PA news agency afterwards, Mr Law said his brotherās mother was āalmost certainlyā underage and unmarried, which was āthe most common cause for children being put up for adoption, forced into it, either through churches or through health professionalsā.
In his own case, Mr Law said: āWhen I looked up my mother, all I have is a piece of paper so Iām still doing the research to find out.
āSo thatās why I said likely rather than certain.
āSo Iām uncertain, but over that period, in Scotland alone during 1949 to 1976, over 60,000 children for forced adoption.ā
Mr Law said he was born in October 1969 and adopted in January the following year. Meanwhile, his brother was born in November 1971 and also adopted at three months.
Asked why he thinks a formal apology has not been made yet, Mr Law said: āI genuinely donāt know.
āBut itās deeply disappointing for those parents out there who may have never met their children, or indeed the children themselves who have never made that contact.ā