Dernière minute
FRFrance-Maroc : les Bleus affrontent les Lions de l'Atlas pour une place en demi-finaleFREscalade des tensions : l'Iran riposte aux frappes américaines, le Koweït et Bahreïn touchésFRThéâtre des Amandiers : un possible gel des crédits menace le budget de 800.000 eurosFRAlgues vertes en Bretagne : la Cour des comptes demande de renforcer les actionsFRÉlie Semoun : "Je trouve LFI plus dangereux que le RN"CRYPTO-FRNigeria: Une enquête ordonnée sur une agence présidentielle fantômeFRSénateur LR Francis Szpiner mis en examen pour corruption passiveFRCédric Jubillar passe aux aveux : "C'est un système de défense assez classique"FRGuerre en Ukraine : le Kremlin met en garde contre l'escalade, 1,6 million d'enfants exposés à l'endoctrinement russeFRPrésidentielle 2027 : Marine Le Pen lance sa campagne, la droite se rassureFRFrance-Maroc : les Bleus affrontent les Lions de l'Atlas pour une place en demi-finaleFREscalade des tensions : l'Iran riposte aux frappes américaines, le Koweït et Bahreïn touchésFRThéâtre des Amandiers : un possible gel des crédits menace le budget de 800.000 eurosFRAlgues vertes en Bretagne : la Cour des comptes demande de renforcer les actionsFRÉlie Semoun : "Je trouve LFI plus dangereux que le RN"CRYPTO-FRNigeria: Une enquête ordonnée sur une agence présidentielle fantômeFRSénateur LR Francis Szpiner mis en examen pour corruption passiveFRCédric Jubillar passe aux aveux : "C'est un système de défense assez classique"FRGuerre en Ukraine : le Kremlin met en garde contre l'escalade, 1,6 million d'enfants exposés à l'endoctrinement russeFRPrésidentielle 2027 : Marine Le Pen lance sa campagne, la droite se rassure
Newsgather
BackUK Prime Minister to issue formal apology for historical forced adoptions
UK Prime Minister to issue formal apology for historical forced adoptions
En développement
BBC UK News02.07.2026Politique2 dk okumaUnited Kingdom

UK Prime Minister to issue formal apology for historical forced adoptions

L'essentiel

  • Victims of historical forced adoption in the UK will receive a formal apology from the prime minister on Thursday.
  • An estimated 185,000 babies were taken from young mothers between 1949 and 1976, often due to social stigma.
  • Campaigners have long advocated for this apology.

Résumé généré par IA

Pourquoi c'est important

Victims of historical forced adoption, where an estimated 185,000 babies were taken from young mothers between 1949 and 1976, have campaigned for decades for a formal apology from the British state.

Taille de police

Victims of historical forced adoption will receive a formal apology from the prime minister on Thursday after decades of campaigning.

An estimated 185,000 babies were taken from young mothers between 1949 and 1976, with many pressured into giving up their children because they were unmarried.

Campaigner and former Labour MP Ann Keen said she was looking forward to "being released from my shame" when Sir Keir Starmer apologises on behalf of the British state.

The apology comes after years of campaigning from mothers, adoptees, and their wider families and parliamentary reports into the issue.

Campaigners, including Keen, are meeting the prime minister in Downing Street ahead of his statement in Parliament.

Speaking to BBC Radio 4's Today programme ahead of the meeting, Keen said she "didn't have a say" in her son's adoption after she was sent to a Swansea mother and baby home in 1966, when she was 17.

"We all need this apology because we have always been accused of giving up our babies and we didn't give them up," Keen said.

The former health minister said mothers and adoptees had been "waiting a long time" for an apology, but that the government had "done the best they could, because it's so complex".

Affected women have said public sector employees, such as doctors, nurses and social workers, were involved in pressuring them into adoption due to social stigma around being young and unmarried.

In March, a parliamentary inquiry recommended the government urgently apologise for the state's role in the practice.

The inquiry report, from the Education Committee, found that government decisions had "shaped the environment in which unmarried mothers were often shamed and coerced into having their children put up for adoption".

It called for improved access to adoption records, as well as more support for people seeking to contact or reunite with their families.

It stopped short of recommending financial redress to victims, but called on the government to "rigorously assess" how other countries had responded to historical forced adoption, including Australia, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.

A previous report from the Joint Committee on Human Rights called for a state apology in 2022. The then-Conservative government said it was "sorry on behalf of society" in 2023, but said it did not think a formal apology was appropriate "since the state did not actively support these practices".

Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson confirmed two weeks ago that a formal apology was on the way from the UK government.

"The prime minister will have more to say on this shameful period in our history, reflecting the gravity of what has happened," she said at the time.

The apology will come three years after the devolved governments in Cardiff and Holyrood said sorry to victims of forced adoption in Wales and Scotland.

An apology is also expected in Northern Ireland, but not until after the completion of a public inquiry, following a 2021 report on mother and baby institutions, Magdalene laundries and workhouses.

Previous BBC reporting into forced adoption led to the parliamentary inquiry.

Gaynor Weatherly, whose mother was 16 when she was born in 1963, told the BBC in 2021 that while she had found happiness through her own marriage and children, she felt "cheated out of a different life".

Diana Defries, who was 16 when she became pregnant, had her baby taken from her moments after she gave birth.

Also speaking to the BBC in 2021, she said: "I yelled to bring her back, but the nurse then just walked past me and put my daughter on a table out of my reach."

À surveiller

Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes

  • Prime Minister to issue formal apology on Thursday.

    Très probable · En quelques jours

Questions ouvertes

  • Will financial redress be offered to victims?
  • What specific support will be provided for family reunification?

Sujets liés

This article was originally published by BBC UK News.

Articles liés

Plus sur ce sujetforced adoption