She was adopted at 11 by a French family, but there’s a legal twist: her biological family didn’t agree
Yooree Kim was sent from South Korea to France, but her parents thought she was abandoned.


In 1984, at the age of 11, Yooree Kim was sent, along with her younger brother, from South Korea to France through an international adoption program.
Kim’s impoverished mother had sent her children in an orphanage so they could eat, something that was commonplace among poor families. However, after returning to the centre, she found that her children had been sent away, as they had unknowingly been put up for adoption.
In 2022, Kim — who resented her parents for years before figuring out the truth — discovered that her name remained legally registered under her father, indicating that no formal relinquishment had occurred and that false paperwork claiming they were roaming the streets was used as evidence to send them away. This revelation prompted her to seek justice and accountability from the South Korean government.
Kim’s case is part of a broader pattern of systemic issues within South Korea’s adoption practices. A 2023 report by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission concluded that the government’s lack of oversight enabled a shocking foreign adoption program rife with fraud and abuse. The report said that give there was no government regulation on fees, agencies charged large amounts which turned adoptions into “a profit-driven industry”.
It highlighted that adoption agencies often manipulated children’s backgrounds, falsely documenting them as orphans — as happened in Kim’s case — while bypassing proper consent from biological parents, and switching children’s identities altogether.
The shocking findings add that South Korean officials saw foreign adoptions as a cheaper alternative to building a social welfare system for needy children.
Related stories

Will mail be delivered on Labor Day 2025?

Is Labor Day a national holiday in the United States?
The South Korean government issued an apology in April 2025, but many adoptees like Kim are still seeking justice through legal avenues. Kim’s pursuit of compensation is not just about seeking financial redress; it’s about acknowledging the trauma and injustice faced by adoptees who were wrongfully separated from their families.
Get your game on! Whether you’re into NFL touchdowns, NBA buzzer-beaters, world-class soccer goals, or MLB home runs, our app has it all. Dive into live coverage, expert insights, breaking news, exclusive videos, and more – plus, stay updated on the latest in current affairs and entertainment. Download now for all-access coverage, right at your fingertips – anytime, anywhere.
Complete your personal details to comment