The Department of State shares your humanitarian concern for the children of Kosovo and applauds your desire to assist them in their time of need. However, at this point, adopting a child from this region is not a feasible way to assist them. In particular, most Kosovo children are not adoptable. There are a number of reasons for this:
In general, adoptions are private civil legal matters governed by the laws
of the nation where the child resides. The process involves complex foreign
and U.S. legal requirements. The laws in the former Yugoslavia (Serbia/Montenegro)
give priority to their own citizens and make adoptions by foreigners very
difficult. In a crisis situation, such as the Kosovo refugees are experiencing
at the present time, it can be extremely difficult to determine if children
who's parents are missing are truly orphans. It is not uncommon in a hostile
situation for parents to send their children out of the area, or to become
separated during an evacuation. Even when children have been truly orphaned
or abandoned by their parents, they are often taken in by other relatives.
Staying with relatives in extended family units is generally a better solution
than uprooting the child completely. |