The Phnom Penh Post

India’s poor fear surrogacy industry will be shut down

- Abhaya Srivastava

AT A hostel for dozens of pregnant women, impoverish­ed widow Sharmila Mackwan weighs up her decision to carry twins for another couple – her only ticket out of poverty – as the government moves to close India’s multimilli­on-dollar surrogacy industry.

She has left her own children at an orphanage for the whole nine months of her pregnancy because her contract stipulates she has to stay at the housing facility, which is attached to the hospital she will deliver at in western Gujarat state.

She also knows the 400,000 rupees ($6,000) she will eventually earn for safely giving birth to the twins will change her family’s fortunes.

But authoritie­s are planning to ban the controvers­ial commercial practice – dubbed rent-a-womb – due to concerns about exploitati­on.

“Surrogacy should stay as otherwise I would have never been able to save so much money even if I had slogged all my life,” said Mackwan, who plans to use the money to send her sons, aged 9 and 12, to school and to build a small house.

“I am quite scared as I am carrying twins for the first time. But what can I do? I am just hoping God will take care of me,” the 31-year-old added, easing into a chair at the hostel’s dormitory, where some 60 women sleep in beds side by side in spacious rooms.

Mackwan, who is four months pregnant, is among about 2,000 mainly poor Indian women who earn a relative fortune every year carrying babies for others.

India has become a world leader in the industry, with hundreds of foreign couples flocking for cheap services. India tightened rules surroundin­g the industry in 2012 by barring gay couples and single people from using such services. Last November authoritie­s instructed surrogacy clinics to stop accepting overseas clients.

India’s 2,000-odd clinics charge couples between $20,000 and $30,000, a fraction of the price in the US and other Western countries, while offering modern technology, skilled doctors and a steady supply of surrogates.

But Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj said such services were being misused, with the proposed law aimed at protecting women’s welfare. “Many so-called childless couples were misusing the wombs of poor women. It was a matter of great worry because there were instances where a girl child or disabled child have been abandoned soon after birth,” she said.

The proposed law, which still has to be passed by parliament, sparked an outcry among couples desperate for a family, along with heated debate in India about the ethics of hiring out a women’s body.

At a hospital in Gujarat’s Anand town, India’s surrogacy capital, fertility specialist Nayana Patel warned of the dangers of banning the industry.

“Anything you try to ban totally will happen undergroun­d. People will find other ways and means and that would be even worse,” said Patel. She also said the ban would deny scores of poor women “a lifetime opportunit­y” to improve their lives.

At the hostel, Mackwan can rest and her diet and health are monitored. The stay away from her home town also offers a reprieve from the social stigma of being a surrogate. She concedes she is concerned about her sons in the orphanage but feels she made the right decision to carry twins for an Indian couple.

“My drunkard husband killed himself just before I delivered my own second baby. My in-laws threw me out and I had no one else to turn to,” said Mackwan.

Health experts say many that choose to become surrogates lack basic safeguards – such as medical insurance if something goes wrong during pregnancy.

There have been reports of illiterate women being pressured into signing contracts they don’t understand.

Sutapa B Neogi said surrogates are often impregnate­d with multiple fertilised eggs to increase the chances of pregnancy. Abortions are performed if more than one pregnancy takes hold.

“Every abortion poses a health risk to the mother besides obviously the psychologi­cal trauma,” said Neogi, a professor at the Delhi-based Indian Institute of Public Health.

Under the new law, only married Indian couples will be allowed to opt for surrogacy and only then by using an unpaid close relative, said Swaraj.

But 26-year-old surrogate Jagruti Bhoi and others at the hostel criticised the government, saying it knew little of the decisions facing poor women.

“It is easy for the ministers to sit in their plush offices and make decisions for us poor,” Bhoi said.

“In our hearts we know we are doing something that will help our families and also those sisters longing to have babies of their own.”

 ?? SAM PANTHAKY/AFP ?? Indian surrogate mothers rest at the Akanksha Hospital and Research Institute on September 1.
SAM PANTHAKY/AFP Indian surrogate mothers rest at the Akanksha Hospital and Research Institute on September 1.

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