China Daily

Expert: Surrogate kids face rejection

- By ASSOCIATED PRESS in Canberra, Australia

A newborn Down syndrome baby left by his Australian biological father with his poor surrogate mother in Thailand was one of several cases of surrogate children abandoned because of defects, an expert told a parliament­ary inquiry on Thursday.

The high- profile case of baby Gammy prompted the Thai government to ban surrogacy in 2014, and an Australian parliament­ary committee launched a review of Australia’s laws that prohibit commercial surrogacy.

Gammy was left with his surrogate mother, Pattaramon Chanbua, a 21- year- old food vendor with two young children of her own, when he was born in December 2013. Pattaramon accused the boy’s biological parents, Wendy and David Farnell, of leaving her with the infant while taking his healthy twin sister, Pipah, back with them to Australia.

The Farnells denied they had abandoned their son because of his disability, and accused Pattaramon of demanding to keep the boy.

Chief Judge John Pascoe, head of the Federal Circuit Court of Australia and an expert on surrogacy, told the House of Representa­tives Standing Committee on Social Policy and Legal Affairs that Gammy was not a unique case.

“We believe that baby Gammy was certainly not an isolated incidence,” Pascoe said.

Pascoe later told The Associated Press that there was anecdotal evidence that commission­ing parents would often not accept babies born with “defects and problems.”

Gammy continues to be raised by his surrogate mother in the town of Sri Racha on the east coast of Thailand with the help of a $ 180,000 fund raised for him by the Australian charity Hands Across the Water.

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