The Borneo Post (Sabah)

As surrogacy booms, fears Ukraine becoming ‘online baby store’

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Tears of joy stream down Andrea Viez’s face as she li s her baby boy, born to a surrogate mother in Ukraine.

“He’s a star,” the Argentinia­n in her late 40s says, her voice trembling.

A er nine years of trying to have a child, Viez can finally hold her son in her arms, thanks to a booming surrogacy industry in Ukraine that has given hope to thousands of struggling wouldbe parents.

But behind their dream-cometrue is a highly profitable and murky business that many worry is taking advantage of desperate young women and operating in a grey zone open to abuse.

“Ukraine is becoming an internatio­nal online baby store,” the country’s commission­er for children’s rights Mykola Kuleba warned last month, condemning the ‘exploitati­on’ of Ukrainian women and calling for a ban on the industry.

The fact that Ukraine is one of the few countries allowing commercial surrogacy for foreigners was oddly thrown into the spotlight by the coronaviru­s.

When travel restrictio­ns imposed to fight the pandemic prevented dozens of parents from picking up their children born to surrogates, a local surrogacy company posted a video online showing the infants lying in rows of plastic cots in a hotel on the edge of Kiev.

The BioTexCom clinic hoped to draw a ention to the stranded babies’ plight. It worked and the government stepped in to help parents like Viez obtain special permits and pick up their children a few weeks later.

Though it has existed since the early 2000s, the industry exploded in Ukraine a er India and Thailand outlawed commercial surrogacy for foreigners about five years ago.

One of the poorest countries in Europe, the post-Soviet nation is also known for its a ractive prices, with birth through a surrogate costing about US$42,000.

In the United States it can cost more than twice as much.

Total chaos

There are no official statistics, but experts say between 2,500 and 3,000 children are born every year through surrogacy in Ukraine for foreign parents. About a third of customers are Chinese.

The industry is poorly regulated and rife with abuse and corruption, says Sergiy Antonov, who runs a law firm specialisi­ng in reproducti­ve issues.

Women are sometimes not paid promised amounts or are housed in terrible conditions during the later stages of their pregnancie­s. In some cases parents have discovered they have no genetic link with children born to surrogates.

Authoritie­s suspect some clinics are also using surrogacy as a cover for illegal commercial adoptions.

“It’s total chaos,” Antonov says.

Olga Korsunova, a 27-yearold going through her fourth surrogate pregnancy, says women ‘very o en’ have trouble obtaining money they were promised.

They are most o en hired through intermedia­ries who keep part of the surrogacy fee.

Korsunova is paid US$400 a month during a pregnancy and receives US$15,000 a er delivery.

“I would not call this exploitati­on, nobody forces us,” she says in the modest flat she rents in Kiev with her eightyear-old son.

Korsunova dreams of becoming a doctor but started working as a surrogate a er she and her son fled war-torn eastern Ukraine in 2014.

She does admit that because of their drastic financial situation Ukrainian women ‘trade part of your health... for money’.

Another surrogate, 26-year-old Olga, says she is happy to be able to help people have children.

“These children will be loved by their parents for the rest of their lives,” says Olga, who is expecting twins for a Chinese couple.

She normally earns about US$135 a month as a waitress and this is her second surrogacy.

She hopes to open a cafe with her payment of US$15,000 a er delivery.

“I’m proud to be able to provide babies to people who couldn’t become parents in a different way,” she says.

“But if I had a normal job, of course I wouldn’t have done it.”

Ukraine is becoming an internatio­nal online baby store.

Mykola Kuleba

 ?? — AFP photos ?? Olga, a 26-year-old going through her second surrogacy and expecting twins for a Chinese couple, holds her belly as she walks in the small town of Sophiya Borshchagi­vka, near Kiev.
— AFP photos Olga, a 26-year-old going through her second surrogacy and expecting twins for a Chinese couple, holds her belly as she walks in the small town of Sophiya Borshchagi­vka, near Kiev.
 ??  ?? Viez holds her baby as she and her husband collect their son born to a surrogate mother, in the Hotel Venice in Kiev.
Viez holds her baby as she and her husband collect their son born to a surrogate mother, in the Hotel Venice in Kiev.
 ??  ?? Korsunova examines an anatomy book in her rental flat in Kiev.
Korsunova examines an anatomy book in her rental flat in Kiev.

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