
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Over the weekend, South Korea announced it would end private adoptions in the country. This comes after an investigation found human rights abuses by international adoption agencies. Some babies had been taken without their birth parents’ knowledge or consent. Records were falsified. Identities were swapped. Babies were stolen.
Host Elahe Izadi speaks with Seoul-based reporter Kelly Kasulis Cho about how adoption fraud occurred for decades in South Korea. We also hear from a man who is now on a quest to find his biological family.
Today’s show was produced by Tadeo Ruiz Sandoval. It was edited by Maggie Penman and mixed by Rennie Svirnovskiy with help from Sam Bair. Thanks to Bart Schaneman.
Subscribe to The Washington Post here.
By The Washington Post4.2
51825,182 ratings
Over the weekend, South Korea announced it would end private adoptions in the country. This comes after an investigation found human rights abuses by international adoption agencies. Some babies had been taken without their birth parents’ knowledge or consent. Records were falsified. Identities were swapped. Babies were stolen.
Host Elahe Izadi speaks with Seoul-based reporter Kelly Kasulis Cho about how adoption fraud occurred for decades in South Korea. We also hear from a man who is now on a quest to find his biological family.
Today’s show was produced by Tadeo Ruiz Sandoval. It was edited by Maggie Penman and mixed by Rennie Svirnovskiy with help from Sam Bair. Thanks to Bart Schaneman.
Subscribe to The Washington Post here.

6,790 Listeners

25,763 Listeners

4,044 Listeners

3,650 Listeners

1,382 Listeners

4,442 Listeners

112,032 Listeners

56,517 Listeners

2,476 Listeners

2,276 Listeners

107 Listeners

10,208 Listeners

7,227 Listeners

2,403 Listeners

16,335 Listeners

2,775 Listeners

6,398 Listeners

2,371 Listeners

15,832 Listeners

232 Listeners

295 Listeners

1,237 Listeners

994 Listeners

403 Listeners

344 Listeners

150 Listeners

57 Listeners

32 Listeners

617 Listeners