Business Day (Nigeria)

Pope Francis insists on abolition of surrogacy

…as Nigeria remains low-cost destinatio­n for int’l surrogacy

- By Temitayo Ayetoto-oladehinde

POPE Francis is pushing hard for the abolition of surrogacy as he partners with internatio­nal advocates to protect mothers and children from exploitati­ve transactio­ns in a booming global market estimated to be worth about $14 billion as of 2022.

The pope believes the practice strips both the mother and child of human dignity with transactio­ns that pay off child-bearing services.

He has called for the adoption of the 2023 Casablanca Declaratio­n which seeks the establishm­ent of a treaty abolishing surrogacy.

“I consider deplorable the practice of so-called surrogate motherhood which seriously offends the dignity of the woman and the child. It is based on the exploitati­on of a situation of material needs of the mother. A child is always a gift and never the object of a contract,” Pope Francis said during an internatio­nal conference with advocates.

About 20,000 babies are born through surrogacy yearly across the world and many of the advocates against it argue that it violates the rights of the children and makes the woman an object.

Nigeria has retained its spot as one of the low-cost destinatio­ns for internatio­nal surrogacy without regulation­s despite increasing reforms in developed countries to clean up surrogacy procedures.

While commercial surrogacy operates in a legal grey area in Nigeria, with no laws to ensure ethical practices or protect surrogate mothers, women can still be compensate­d for carrying another couple’s geneticall­y related child through IVF and embryo transfer.

According to NGA Law, a Uk-based fertility law firm that specialise­s in internatio­nal surrogacy, such plans in Nigeria often lack transparen­cy and altruism and could be poverty-induced.

Between 2014 and 2021,

British parents sought UK parental orders for at least 570 babies born to surrogates, including 33 in Nigeria, 201 in Ukraine, 182 in India, 80 in Georgia, and 26 in Thailand, according to Children and Family Court Advisory and Support Service in England.

Sonnie Ekowowusi, chairman, the Human and Constituti­onal Rights Committee in Nigeria, said the body receives numerous reports of people pressured into surrogacy, sometimes by poverty.

“We always advise against it,” he said.

Vatican teaching opposes in vitro fertilisat­ion, and Pope Francis has previously voiced the Roman Catholic Church’s opposition to surrogacy, or what he has called “uterus for rent.”

At the same time, however, the Vatican’s doctrine office has made clear that same-sex parents who resort to surrogacy can have their children baptised.

Although commercial surrogacy contracts are common in the United States, including protection­s for mothers, guarantees of independen­t legal representa­tion, and medical coverage, they are banned in parts of Europe, including Spain and Italy.

Kajsa Ekis Ekman, author of Being and Being Bought – Prostituti­on Surrogacy and Split Self, said many who voluntaril­y take up surrogacy unconsciou­sly sell off their rights.

“A lot of people think this is about your right to decide about your own body. In reality, it is the opposite. You are renouncing the right to your body in this contract,” Ekman said during the conference.

“This contract usually stipulates that you may not eat what you want, you may not travel, and so on. The most chilling one of all is that if you have an accident and you end up in a coma, it is the buyers, not your family who decide whether you are going to be kept alive until they can take the baby out.”

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