The Phnom Penh Post

Surrogacy ban lacks force of law

- Erin Handley

ANTI-SURROGACY advocates have welcomed the government’s recent stance to ban surrogacy in Cambodia, though legal experts have warned that the shady practice could still continue if the prohibitio­n is not enshrined in law.

In a ministry directive, or prakas, signed October 24, Health Minister Mam Bunheng signed off on a total ban on surrogacy.

Article 12 of the prakas, obtained by the Post yesterday, reads: “Surrogacy, one of a set of services to have a baby by Assisted Reproducti­ve Technology, is banned completely”.

Bunheng and health spokespeop­le could not be reached yesterday, but the single line in the prakas did not outline any legal consequenc­es for those who breach the ban.

Legal expert Sok Sam Oeun said this left the ban in a potentiall­y flimsy state. “A prohibitio­n to do something must be made by the law,” he said. A prakas, he added, must be consistent with the law, but there is currently no law outlawing surrogacy.

Justice Ministry spokesman Chin Malin said he was not aware of the Health Ministry’s directive. “We are in the process of studying [so we can start] drafting the law for prevention of surrogacy,” he said.

Rodrigo Montero, gender adviser with the German developmen­t agency GIZ, said outlawing surrogacy was the “right approach” because “surrogacy means supporting the selfish interests of foreigners and of those who want to gain money from this very profitable and unethical business”.

But Sam Everingham of Families Through Surrogacy said the Health Ministry’s position was “likely a response to concerted pressure from Western government­s” and added that surrogacy arrangemen­ts are “poles apart” from child traffickin­g.

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