The Phnom Penh Post

Thai man arrested for smuggling sperm into Laos

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THAI authoritie­s arrested a man trying to smuggle six vials of sperm into Laos, a customs officer said yesterday, the latest sign that a commercial surrogacy industry is growing in the opaque communist country following curbs around the region.

The 25-year-old was arrested in the border town of Nong Khai with the tubes packed inside a nitrogen tank, according to a Thai customs officer.

“It was his 13th time smuggling [semen] through Nong Khai,” the official said, requesting anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to the press.

Officials believe that the vials were bound for a surrogacy clinic in Laos, an impoverish­ed country that is quickly soaking up demand for the “rent a womb” business.

The boom in Laos, an authoritar­ian nation with no restrictio­ns on surrogacy, comes after neighbouri­ng Thailand and Cambodia clamped down on the industry following a flurry of scandals and concerns about exploitati­on.

A number of Laos-linked surrogacy agencies and IVF clinics have cropped up in recent months, according to consultanc­y group Families Through Surrogacy.

Some offer services to carry out the embryo transfer in Laos and then provide pregnancy care for the surrogate in Thailand, a wealthier country with vastly superior medical facilities.

According to the Thai customs officer, the man was carrying sperm donated from Chinese and Vietnamese men in Bangkok. He was fined for violating a law that bans exporting reproducti­ve tissues.

Thailand for years hosted a thriving yet largely unregulate­d internatio­nal surrogacy industry popular with same-sex couples.

But a string of scandals in 2014 – including tussles over custody – spurred the military government to bar foreigners from using Thai surrogates.

In one high-profile controvers­y, authoritie­s discovered nine babies in a Bangkok apartment that had been fathered by a Japanese man using Thai surrogate mothers.

Thailand’s crackdown pushed the industry over to neighbouri­ng Cambodia, where it took off until the government banned surrogacy last year.

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