The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘Birth tourism’ is legal in Canada; a lawmaker calls it unscrupulo­us

Country is now a favored haven for well-off Chinese.

- Dan Bilefsky

RICHMOND, BRITISH COLUMBIA — Melody Bai arrived in Vancouver from China in the late stages of pregnancy with one goal: to give birth to a Canadian baby.

Awaiting her was an elaborate ecosystem catering to pregnant women from China, including a spacious “baby house” where she spent four months, attended to by a Mandarin-speaking housekeepe­r.

Caregivers offered free breast massages to promote lactation, outings to the mall, lectures on childbirth with other Chinese mothers-to-be and excursions for high tea.

“It’s an investment in my child’s education,” Bai, 28, a flight attendant, said by phone from Shanghai, months after returning to China with her newborn and passport in hand. “We chose Canada because of its better natural and social environmen­t.”

Bai is part of a growing phenomenon in Canada known as birth tourism, which is not only generating political opposition, but mobilizing self-appointed vigilantes determined to stop it. It is perfectly legal. Under the principle of jus soli — the right of the soil — being born in Canada confers automatic citizenshi­p. But as more pregnant women arrive each month to give birth, some Canadians are protesting that they are gaming the system, testing the limits of tolerance and debasing the notion of citizenshi­p.

In Richmond, a city outside Vancouver where about 53 percent of its roughly 200,000 residents are ethnic Chinese, nonresiden­t mothers account for 1 in 5 births at the Richmond Hospital, the largest number of nonresiden­t births of any hospital in the country, according to a recent report.

“Birth tourism may be legal, but it is unethical and unscrupulo­us,” said Joe Peschisoli­do, a Liberal member of Parliament in Richmond, who brought a petition against the practice to Ottawa, where the immigratio­n minister, Ahmed Hussen, said he would examine the issue.

The practice underlines how Canada, and British Columbia in particular, has become a favored haven for well-heeled Chinese seeking a refuge for wealth and kin away from authoritar­ian China.

The issue of birthright citizenshi­p gained global attention in October after President Donald Trump said he wanted to eliminate it, though it is enshrined in the U.S. Constituti­on.

At least 30 other countries, including Canada, Mexico and Brazil, grant automatic birthright citizenshi­p. Others like Britain and Australia have tightened their laws by requiring that at least one parent be a citizen or permanent resident at the time of the child’s birth.

Indicating that immigratio­n could be an issue in federal elections next year in Canada, the opposition Conservati­ve party this summer endorsed a nonbinding motion calling for unconditio­nal birthright citizenshi­p to be abolished.

In the recent report, from the Institute for Research on Public Policy, Andrew Griffith, a former director general at the government department responsibl­e for immigratio­n, showed that the number of children born to nonresiden­ts in Canada was at least five times as high as previously thought — close to 1,500 to 2,000 annually.

Griffith argues that Canada intended birthright citizenshi­p for those who wanted to live in and contribute to the country. “Since those engaging in birth tourism have no or barely any real link to Canada,” he said, “the practice is challengin­g a very Canadian value of fair play.”

With its sprawling Chinese food markets, Chinese-language newspapers and large number of caregivers speaking Mandarin, Richmond has become ground zero for birth tourists from China.

About two dozen baby houses are in operation. Visits to about 15 addresses showed that some operate openly while others work under licenses as tour agencies or present themselves as holiday rentals. Some are in homes. Others are in apartments. Many are booked through agents and brokers in China.

Bob Huang, who with his wife runs Anxin Labour Service, a birthing center in the nearby city of Burnaby, said he was frequently contacted by agents in China who wanted a 50 percent commission on every successful referral. He said he preferred to post his own ads on local Chinese classified­s websites.

Some Richmond residents say birth tourism is underminin­g the community’s social fabric.

Kerry Starchuk, a self-described “hockey mom” who spearheade­d the petition championed by Peschisoli­do, documents baby houses in her neighborho­od and passes the informatio­n on to the local news media and city officials.

 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Kerry Starchuk spearheade­d a petition against birth tourism. She documents baby houses in her neighborho­od and passes the informatio­n on to the local news media and city officials.
THE NEW YORK TIMES Kerry Starchuk spearheade­d a petition against birth tourism. She documents baby houses in her neighborho­od and passes the informatio­n on to the local news media and city officials.

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