India's cabinet approved a bill to restrict surrogacy services to local married couples, following concerns about the exploitation of young, poor women who bear babies for others ©Money Sharma (AFP) |
India's government
Wednesday approved plans to ban the booming commercial surrogacy industry, a
move that would block thousands of foreign couples who flock to centres to have
a baby.
AFP
report continues:
Foreign
Minister Sushma Swaraj said cabinet cleared a bill to restrict surrogacy
services to local married couples, following concerns about the exploitation of
young, poor Indian women who bear babies for others.
"This
is a comprehensive bill to completely ban commercial surrogacy," Swaraj
told reporters after the cabinet meeting.
"Childless
couples, who are medically unfit to have children, can take help from a close
relative, which is called altruistic surrogacy," she said.
Swaraj
said foreign couples, along with all single or gay prospective parents, would
be barred from surrogacy services in India if parliament passed the bill.
The
government last year flagged the shutdown of the multi-million dollar industry,
sparking an outcry from fertility specialists at the country's 2,000-odd
centres.
Ranks
of childless foreign couples have flocked to the country in recent years looking
for a cheap, legal and simple route to parenthood.
But
critics of the industry said a lack of legislation encouraged
"rent-a-womb" exploitation of impoverished Indian women who were
denied rights in surrogacy arrangements.
Swaraj
said the bill would also address concerns about the welfare of the child,
following reports disabled babies have been rejected by couples.
Some
2,000 infertile couples hire the wombs of Indian women to carry their embryos
through to birth every year, according to the government.
India,
with cheap technology, skilled doctors and a steady supply of local surrogates,
is one of relatively few countries where women can be paid to carry another's
child.
Surrogacy
for profit is illegal in many other countries.
Swaraj
said the ban would be introduced 10 months after the bill was passed in
parliament, to allow pregnant women already in arrangements with couples time
to give birth.
The
industry criticized the move as over the top, saying couples desperate to have
children would be left with few options.
"While
we need regulations to ensure that no women are forced into surrogacy, an
outright ban isn't logical," Archana Dhawan Bajaj, fertility and IVF
consultant at New Delhi-based Nurture Clinic, told AFP.
Surrogacy
mothers last year held protests against the government's plans, saying they
would be denied an income, usually about US$5,000 per pregnancy, a huge sum in
India where millions live in grinding poverty.
After
opening up to surrogacy in 2002, India has become one of the world's leaders,
generating between US$500 million and US$2.3 billion annually, according to
various estimates.
Russia
and some US states are among those that also allow commercial surrogacy. But
India's clinics charge couples between US$20,000 and US$30,000, a fraction of
the price in the United States.
Thailand passed a law last year banning commercial surrogacy for foreigners after a series of high-profile scandals.
No comments:
Post a Comment