Khaleej Times

Chinese baby born four years after parents’ death in car crash

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BEIJING — A surrogate mother has given birth to a baby boy in China four years after his parents died in a car crash, Chinese media reported.

The deceased couple was undergoing fertility treatments before the fatal accident in 2013.

Their parents fought a drawnout legal battle to gain access to the couple’s fertilised embryos, kept in a hospital in the eastern city of Nanjing.

The baby boy — nicknamed “Tiantian,” or “sweet” in Mandarin — was born on December 9 to a Laotian surrogate, the Beijing News reported Tuesday.

Surrogacy is illegal in China, forcing those who can afford it to look for potential options abroad.

Laos has become the latest impoverish­ed nation in Asia to witness a flourishin­g but legally opaque commercial surrogacy industry after countries like Thailand, Cambodia and Nepal outlawed the practice in recent years.

“He’s always smiling. His eyes are like my daughter’s, but he looks more like his dad,” new grandmothe­r Hu Xingxian, told the staterun newspaper.

The grandparen­ts had to clear several hurdles to transport the embryos out of China and prove the paternity and nationalit­y of the baby once it was born.

“First we thought of using air freight, but none of the airlines were willing to take the thermossiz­ed bottle of liquid nitrogen where the four embryos were stored,” Liu Baojun, a surrogacy

He’s always smiling. His eyes are like my daughter’s, but he looks more like his dad Hu Xingxian, grandmom of the baby

expert who assisted the families, told The Beijing News.

So the families decided to transport their precious cargo by road to Laos, where commercial surrogacy is legal.

The next problem was getting the baby back into China. Children born through surrogacy outside the country need to have a DNA test proving that one of the biological parents is a Chinese national.

To get around the issue, the Laotian surrogate mother was brought to China on a tourist visa and the families arranged for her to give birth at a private hospital in the southern city of Guangzhou.

The child was kept in the hospital for 15 days, until all four grandparen­ts gave blood and DNA tests, establishi­ng the baby was indeed their grandson and that both parents were Chinese nationals.

The landmark ruling that allows parents to inherit frozen embryos created by their children has triggered a wide-ranging debate on Chinese social media.

Dozens of commentato­rs said it highlights the plight of parents who have lost their only child under China’s controvers­ial one-child policy. Others discussed the need to legalise surrogacy. —

 ?? AFP ?? A nurse checks on a baby in a hospital in Xichang, southwest China’s Sichuan province. —
AFP A nurse checks on a baby in a hospital in Xichang, southwest China’s Sichuan province. —

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