-
Inter snapping at Napoli's heels, Roma poised to pounce
-
India space agency launches its heaviest satellite
-
Wolves sack Pereira after winless Premier League start
-
Debutants Berkane among CAF Champions League top seeds
-
Sundar steers India to five-wicket win over Australia in 3rd T20
-
What we know about the UK train stabbings
-
Jonathan Milan wins wet Tour de France Singapore Criterium
-
Canadian teen Mboko wins Hong Kong Open for second WTA title
-
Two children among dead in Russian blitz on Ukraine
-
South Africa opt to bowl against India in Women's World Cup final
-
Dominant McKibbin wins Hong Kong Open to seal Masters spot
-
US Navy veterans battle PTSD with psychedelics
-
'Unheard of': Dodgers in awe of iron man Yamamoto
-
UK police probe mass train stabbing that wounded 10
-
'It's hard' - Jays manager Schneider rues missed chances in World Series defeat
-
Women's cricket set for new champion as India, South Africa clash
-
Messi scores but Miami lose as Nashville level MLS Cup playoff series
-
Dodgers clinch back-to-back World Series as Blue Jays downed in thriller
-
Vietnam flood death toll rises to 35: disaster agency
-
History-making Japan golf twins push each other to greater heights
-
Death becomes a growing business in ageing, lonely South Korea
-
India's cloud seeding trials 'costly spectacle'
-
Chiba wins women's title, Malinin leads at Skate Canada
-
Siakam sparks injury-hit Pacers to season's first NBA win
-
Denmark's fabled restaurant noma sells products to amateur cooks
-
UK train stabbing wounds 10, two suspects arrested
-
Nashville top Messi's Miami 2-1 to level MLS Cup playoff series
-
Fergie, her daughters and the corgis hit by Andrew crisis
-
'I can't eat': Millions risk losing food aid during US shutdown
-
High price of gold inspires new rush in California
-
'Swing for the fences': Carney promises bold budget as US threat grows
-
UK police arrest two after 'multiple people' stabbed on train
-
NBA Hawks lose guard Young for four weeks with knee sprain
-
50 dead as Caribbean digs out from Hurricane Melissa
-
Forever Young gives Japan first Breeders' Cup Classic triumph
-
Mbappe's Real Madrid extend Liga lead, Villarreal move second
-
Salah savours 'great feeling' after 250th Liverpool goal
-
Ethical Diamond surges to upset win in $5 million Breeders' Cup Turf
-
Kinghorn kicks Toulouse to Top 14 summit
-
Mbappe extends Real Madrid's Liga lead in Valencia rout
-
All Blacks sink 14-man Ireland 26-13 in Chicago Test
-
World champ Malinin takes lead at Skate Canada
-
Liverpool snap losing streak as Salah hits 250 goals in Villa win
-
Salah's 250th Liverpool goal sinks Villa as Arsenal cruise at Burnley
-
Morant suspended by Grizzlies after rebuking coaching staff
-
Spalletti begins Juve tenure with win at Cremonese but Napoli held
-
Frank refuses to condemn Van de Ven, Spence for snub in Spurs defeat
-
France superstar Dupont extends Toulouse deal
-
Egypt officially opens grand museum near pyramids
-
French fraud watchdog reports Shein for 'childlike' sex dolls
Soft power: BTS fans rally behind Korean international adoptees
K-pop megaband BTS is back from military service, and their international fandom -- long known for its progressive activism -- is celebrating by rallying behind a cause: adoptees from South Korea.
Now Asia's fourth-largest economy and a global cultural powerhouse, the idols' native South Korea remains one of the biggest exporters of adopted babies in the world, having sent more than 140,000 children overseas between 1955 and 1999.
The country only recently acknowledged, after years of activism by adult adoptees, that the government was responsible for abuse in some such adoptions of local children, including record fabrication and inadequate consent from birth parents.
The septet's fandom, dubbed ARMY, is known for backing causes like Black Lives Matter and ARMY4Palestine, and launched the #ReuniteWithBTS fundraising project last week to support Korean adoptees seeking to reconnect with or learn about their birth families, which can be a painful and legally tricky process.
Almost all of BTS members have completed South Korea's mandatory military service, required of all men due to the country's military tensions with North Korea.
"We are celebrating both the reunion of BTS and ARMY, and BTS members being able to reunite with their own family and friends," the BTS fan group behind the initiative, One In An ARMY, told AFP.
"Helping international adoptees reunite with their birth country, culture, customs and families seemed like the perfect cause to support during this time."
The fans are supporting KoRoot, a Seoul-based organisation that helps Korean adoptees search for their records and birth families and which played a key role in pushing for the government to recognise adoption-related abuses.
Peter Moller, KoRoot's co-representative, told AFP it was "very touching" that the BTS fans had taken up the cause, even though "they're not even adoptees themselves".
For many adoptees, seeing Korean stars in mainstream media has been a way for them to find "comfort, joy, and a sense of pride" in the roots that they were cut off from, KoRoot's leader Kim Do-hyun added.
- Soft power -
BTS, who have discussed anti-Asian hate crimes at the White House and spoken candidly about mental health, have long been considered one of the best examples of South Korea's soft power reach.
For years, Korean adoptees -- many of whom were adopted by white families globally -- have advocated for their rights and spoken out about encountering racism in their host countries.
Some adoptees, such as the high-profile case of Adam Crapser, were later deported to South Korea as adults because their American parents never secured their US citizenship.
Many international adoptees feel their immigration experience has been "fraught", Keung Yoon Bae, a Korean studies professor at Georgia Institute of Technology, told AFP.
Some adoptees have found that, like Crapser, their guardians failed to complete the necessary paperwork to make them legal, she said.
This is becoming a particular problem under US President Donald Trump, who is pushing a sweeping crackdown on purported illegal immigrants.
Bae said it was possible that "'accidentally illegal' adoptee immigrants may fall further through the cracks, and their deeply unfortunate circumstances left unremedied".
- The whale -
Reunions between Korean adoptees and their birth families can be emotionally complex, as Kara Bos -- who grew up in the United States -- experienced firsthand when she met her biological father through a landmark paternity lawsuit.
During their encounter in Seoul in 2020, he refused to remove his hat, sunglasses, or mask, declined to look at her childhood photos and offered no information about her mother. He died around six months later.
"The journey of birth family searching is very lonely, difficult, and costly. Many adoptees do not even have the means to return to their birth country let alone fund a family search," Bos, 44, told AFP.
To have BTS fans rally around adoptees and provide help with this complex process is "a wonderful opportunity", she said.
For Malene Vestergaard, a 42-year-old Korean adoptee and BTS fan in Denmark, the group's song "Whalien 52", which references a whale species whose calls go unheard by others, deeply resonated with her.
"I personally sometimes feel like that whale. Being amongst my peers, but they will never be able to truly understand what my adoption has done to me," she told AFP.
"For me, finding BTS at the same time I started looking for my birth family and the truth about my adoption and my falsified papers, was such a comfort."
Vestergaard said the grief woven into her adoption would never go away, but that "BTS and their lyrics have made it easier to reconcile with that truth".
U.Shaheen--SF-PST