US urges prospective parents to reconsider adoptions from Haiti

The U.S. Department of State has issued a strong warning to prospective adoptive parents, urging them to reconsider intercountry adoptions from Haiti due to extreme instability and ongoing safety concerns.

2025-04-24 13:09:13 - VI News Staff

In its latest advisory released April 22, the Department cited the closure or limited operation of Haitian government offices and courts essential to the adoption process. These disruptions follow the deterioration of conditions in Haiti since March 2, 2024, when the country entered a new phase of crisis and declared a state of emergency.

“Adoption from Haiti is a long process in a dangerous environment that impedes processing,” the Department previously stated on April 14. The average intercountry adoption from Haiti already took approximately four years, and officials say the timeline has only grown longer due to violent unrest, gang activity, and systemic breakdowns in public services.

Since November 2024, commercial flights in and out of Port-au-Prince have been suspended. U.S. embassy personnel remain restricted in their movements and are barred from using public transportation or entering large parts of the capital. Meanwhile, Foreign Supervised Providers (FSPs)—the individuals and agencies responsible for navigating adoption cases through courts and government offices—are facing increased difficulty operating safely.

“There may be times where FSPs are unable to advance cases as security conditions compel them to shelter in place,” the Department warned. “The Department of State has no capacity to provide security or transportation to FSPs involved in case processing.”


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