The Back to Roots care and support program for adopted people from Sri Lanka living in Switzerland will continue until the end of 2025.
The Swiss Conference of Cantonal Justice and Police Directors are funding the project for another year, the Back to Roots Association said on Thursday.
So far, around 70 adopted people from Sri Lanka have benefited from the program, Celin Fässler from Back to Roots said. The findings since the start of the official funding were decisive for the continued funding until the end of 2025.
The pilot project, a part of Switzerland’s migration partnership with Sri Lanka, was originally limited to three years until the end of 2024. A maximum of CHF 250,000 (US$ 274,000) was available per year.
Since the introduction of the program, adopted people who wished to trace their roots have been coming forward on an ongoing basis. At the centre of this is primarily the desire to find out something about their own ancestry.
Documents
Involved are time-consuming searches for documents in Switzerland and Sri Lanka, as well as on-site investigations into individuals and a search for evidence. The procedures to find evidence often take more than a year. Due to the often-unlawful adoption procedures, a conventional search is usually impossible. This necessitates flexible and dynamic support in individual cases.
For many Sri Lankan adoptees, it is important that the Federal Government and cantons take accountability, as they are seen as sharing responsibility for the injustices that occurred.
Namely, the authorities systematically looked the other way from the 1970s to the 1990s, when almost 900 children from Sri Lanka were adopted in Switzerland, most of them illegally, as a report by the Zurich University of Applied Sciences (ZHAW) from February 2020 showed.
(Swissinfo)