Uganda charges US parents over torture of foster son
What you need to know:
- International adoptions have sparked controversy in Uganda. In 2020, the US government filed criminal charges and imposed economic sanctions against a US-based adoption ring that placed Ugandan children who were not orphans with families in the United States.
Ugandan authorities have charged two US foster parents with committing "aggravated torture" against their 10-year-old son, police said Tuesday.
The couple, both 32 years old, were charged on Friday and remanded to Luzira Prison, a maximum security facility on the outskirts of the capital Kampala, police said in a statement.
The charges allege that the couple "constantly tortured" the boy between 2020 and 2022, with neighbours sounding the alarm for the child who attended a school for children with special needs in Kampala.
When police raided the house, they found CCTV evidence showing that the child was forced to squat in an "awkward position", served only cold food and made to sleep on a "wooden platform, without a mattress or bedding," the statement said.
The boy was one of three children fostered by the couple, who arrived in the East African country in 2017 to volunteer at a US-based non-profit in the town of Jinja before moving to Naguru, an upmarket Kampala suburb, to work at a start-up.
International adoptions have sparked controversy in Uganda. In 2020, the US government filed criminal charges and imposed economic sanctions against a US-based adoption ring that placed Ugandan children who were not orphans with families in the United States.