Irish Independent

Couples are kept apart from their surrogate babies by travel bans

- Patrick Sawer MOSCOW

SIDE by side in steel cots in Kiev’s Hotel Venice lie around 50 newborn babies, mewling at the world as nurses comfort them.

But these babies are not abandoned or unwanted. Far from it. They are the product of surrogacy arrangemen­ts with Ukrainian mothers who gave birth to them on behalf of couples desperate for children.

The problem is that those couples cannot travel to the former Soviet republic because of travel restrictio­ns imposed to stem the spread of coronaviru­s.

It is a similar picture in several countries where surrogacy has become a way for women to earn desperatel­y needed money by giving birth on behalf of more affluent families. These include Georgia, India, the United States, Canada, Mexico and Colombia.

Travel bans have left an unknown number of intended parents across the world worried about missing out on vital early bonding experience­s or even fearful of ever seeing the babies for whom they longed.

The situation is particular­ly difficult in Ukraine and Georgia, where dozens of babies born since lockdown are now seven weeks old and in desperate need of stable parenting.

One such parent is Maria, whose son Kaloyan was born on April 17, a month after the border closed – meaning she was not present at the birth and has been unable to travel from her home in Galicia, northern Spain, to be united with him.

“It’s very difficult,” she said. “I’ve been counting the days since he was born, and I’m very anxious about him and how he is.”

The Spanish government, which opposes surrogacy, is unwilling to help Maria travel to Ukraine. She has had to pay a nanny €2,500 a month to care for Kaloyan. That is on top of the €40,000 fee she paid to an agency to arrange the surrogate birth.

“All I can do is wait for travel restrictio­ns to be lifted or to be allowed into the country under special humanitari­an measures,” said Maria, who moved to Spain from Bulgaria 20 years ago.

“In the meantime, the nanny sends me pictures of my son. But it’s not the same.

I want to be with him and hold him.”

Some parents, including several couples from Ireland, managed to get into Ukraine before the barriers went up on internatio­nal travel in March. Others, including from the US and Australia, have made it through after a complex and risky overland journey taking as much as nine hours from Minsk, in Belarus. But now they cannot leave with their children until restrictio­ns are lifted.

The BioTexCom clinic, which arranges surrogacy births in Ukraine where the procedure is legal, is caring for about 50 surrogate babies who cannot be collected.

Surrogate mothers working with the firm get a fee of around €15,000 – enough to buy a house in Ukraine

– to give birth on behalf of adoptive parents from as far afield as Ireland, the US, China, Britain and Sweden.

Denis Herman, a lawyer for BioTexCom, said: “The children are all provided with food. A sufficient number of employees look after them, but there is no substitute for parental care.

“We try to send photos of children to the parents, try to make conference calls, but this can’t replace communicat­ion in direct contact.”

Surrogacy has become a global phenomenon. Latest figures show that in 2012, the industry was worth an estimated €5bn a year.

But the religious and cultural sensitivit­ies around surrogacy mean many find it hard to get help from their own authoritie­s to travel to the country where their babies have been born. (© Daily Telegraph, London)

 ?? PHOTO: EFREM LUKATSKY/AFP ?? Waiting
room: Nurses care for babies born to surrogate mothers for foreign parents in a large room of a hotel in the Ukrainian capital Kiev.
PHOTO: EFREM LUKATSKY/AFP Waiting room: Nurses care for babies born to surrogate mothers for foreign parents in a large room of a hotel in the Ukrainian capital Kiev.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland