Latvia: Report of the Special Rapporteur on the sale of children,
67. The Special Rapporteur received information from the Ministry for Children and Family
Affairs regarding efforts undertaken to decrease the number of children in childcare institutions
and, overall, to decrease the number of institutions. She was informed of promising policies
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undertaken to promote adoption and foster care, in particular favouring national over foreign
adoptions since 2004. The number of foreign adoptions used to be three to four times more than
national adoptions, whereas today, the number of national adoptions is almost double the number
of foreign adoptions. The Government reported that at 31 December 2008, 1,351 adoptable
children were registered in the database and 479 of them were already living in a family,
leaving 872 (64.5 per cent) for whom adoptive families had to be found. In 2008, 73 children
were taken into pre-adoption care in national adopters’ families, which was 15 more than in
2007. Of the remaining adoptable children, the Government reported that 484 of them had a
disability or serious health problem. The Special Rapporteur encourages the Government to
pursue measures to encourage the adoption of children in these two categories, including
psychological and financial support to adoptive families, medical and psychological follow-up
and support of those children, as well as awareness-raising campaigns. In 2008, 83 foreign
adopters were granted permission to adopt children from Latvia, 31 less than in 2007. The
Minister reported that as of 2003, several legislative acts were passed in implementation of the
1993 Hague Convention on the Protection of Children and Cooperation in Respect of
Intercountry Adoption. The Minister added that procedures binding Orphans’ Courts’ decisions
regarding adoptions are now more clearly prescribed.
CRC/C/LVA/CO/2, para. 10.