Global Times

Commercial surrogacy ban criticized by Indian doctors

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Leading Indian fertility doctors and surrogate mothers Thursday criticized a move to ban commercial surrogacy, saying it will severely limit options for childless couples and women who carry others’ babies as a way out of poverty.

India’s cabinet on Wednesday cleared a bill to restrict surrogacy services to Indian married couples, following concerns over the “rent- a- womb” industry exploiting impoverish­ed young women.

The bill seeks to bar foreign, single and homosexual wouldbe parents from surrogacy services in India and states that only women who are close relatives of a beneficiar­y can act as surrogates.

Gita Makwana, 33, who became a surrogate mother in 2010 after having one child of her own, said the bill would remove avenues for women like her to escape poverty.

“When I became a surrogate I got three lakh rupees ($ 4,475) as compensati­on,” said Makwana from Anand in Gujarat state, a center for India’s surrogacy sector. “I used it to repair my house and educate my child. But with the new rules coming in, women who want to become surrogates to support their families, will not be able to do so.”

Dr Himanshu Bavishi, president of the Indian Society for Third Party Assisted Reproducti­on in Ahmedabad, said the decision was “regressive, unfortunat­e and careless.”

“What the government has done is gone for cheap popularity, saying that it’s a move to protect poor, exploited women,” he told AFP.

“This [ surrogacy] in fact gives millions of poor women across India a chance to make a reasonably good amount of money at any one point of time without doing anything rash.”

India, with cheap technology, skilled doctors and a steady supply of local surrogates, is one of the relatively few countries where women can be paid to carry another’s child.

Some 2,000 infertile couples enlist the help of Indian women to carry their embryos through to birth every year, according to the government.

Dr Nayna Patel, the medical director of Akanksha Hospital and Research Institute in Anand, said that while more regulation in the field was welcome, under the bill “virtually no woman” would be able to become a surrogate.

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