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India's new surrogacy laws are only part of the equation : Comments
By Liz Bishop, published 14/3/2013Current arrangements result in the child being treated more like property than as a bearer of rights deserving respect and dignity.
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The discriminatory policy that India put in place on 9 July isn't based on any law, and runs counter to the non-discriminatory approach in the draft ART Bills.
Many eligible intended parents who were considering undertaking surrogacy in India, are steering clear of India because of the perception of regulatory risk. I have been asked many times: “What next?” Others are still prepared to go to India.
Hundreds of Australian intended parents have undertaken surrogacy in India each year. Before India changed its rules, many couples from Queensland, NSW and the ACT were going to India for surrogacy, even though it was an offence to do so in those places. Those intended parents cannot now go to India. In their desperation, they will go elsewhere. The changes will inevitably mean more Australians going to Thailand, the US, more exotic locations, undertaking more altruistic surrogacy back home, and increasing pressure to have commercial surrogacy in Australia.
The legal journey taken by intending parents going overseas is a legal minefield.
It is legal to undertake commercial, traditional surrogacy in the NT.
Finally, the idea of trafficking children ordinarily takes on the idea of a child being stolen or sold. Surrogacy is not that process. It is the process of creating a child, who is ordinarily genetically related to one or both intended parents. The effect of Australia’s confusing citizenship laws mean in effect that children born through surrogacy to Australian intended parents in India must be genetically the child of one or both Australian parents. That is hardly trafficking