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International surrogacy traps babies in stateless limbo

by Emma Batha | @emmabatha | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Thursday, 18 September 2014 11:22 GMT

Gammy, a baby born with Down's Syndrome, is held by his surrogate mother Pattaramon Janbua (not seen) at a hospital in Chonburi province, Thailand, on August 3, 2014. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj

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No country is granting these babies citizenship because of conflicts over the definition of legal parents

THE HAGUE, Sept 18 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - The lack of regulation around international commercial surrogacy has left many babies in stateless limbo, with no country granting them citizenship because of complex conflicts over who the legal parents are.

Experts said the problem could affect thousands of babies as more and more couples seek surrogates in countries like India, Mexico and Thailand, turning it into a multimillion dollar business.

Problems arise when the country of the intended parents and the country of the surrogate mother both refuse to grant the baby nationality, or when the parents who ordered the baby decide to abandon it.

"International commercial surrogacy can and does lead to child statelessness," said Claire Achmad, a New Zealand lawyer told experts told the first international forum on statelessness.

Stateless people have no nationality and are not accepted as citizens by any country. Without citizenship, stateless children are deprived of basic rights most people take for granted and cannot access healthcare and education.

Achmad cited the case of a Norwegian woman, Kari Ann Volden, who had used an Indian surrogate to carry a baby created from a donated egg and sperm.

The surrogate gave birth to twin boys in early 2010, but Norway refused to give Volden passports to take the twins home, saying the Indian surrogate was the legal parent. India also refused to recognise the babies, saying that Volden was the legal parent.

"For the first two years of their life, these twins (were) stateless," Achmad said. Volden and the twins were stranded in India until she was able to go back to Norway and legally adopt them.

The statelessness forum, which ended on Wednesday, focused on large-scale stateless situations. The United Nations is launching a major drive to end statelessness, which affects 10 million people around the world.

Achmad said the rise in surrogacy was creating "a new generation of children born lost, at a time when we are trying to eliminate statelessness".

She cited another case in which a gay couple from Belgium arranged for a baby to be born in Ukraine, but Belgian authorities refused to accept the men as the boy's legal parents.

Neither Belgium nor Ukraine recognised the baby as a citizen, and he ended up spending the first 16 months of his life with foster parents and another year in an orphanage before he was allowed into Belgium.

REJECTED BABIES

Lawyers said cases were currently sorted out in an ad hoc way, and there is a need for international regulation that takes into account the child's best interests.

Sanoj Rajan, a professor at the School of Law at ITM University in India, said surrogacy was big business and the issue of potential statelessness was not as marginal as might appear. He said there were at least 10,000 surrogacy clinics in India, and most are not registered.

"No one knows how many surrogate children are being born in India," he said.

Would-be parents come to India from other parts of Asia and the Middle East Gulf, as well as Europe and the United States.

Rajan said most citizenship problems arise when the parents are from a country that bans commercial surrogacy, like France, Italy, Germany and Spain, and the baby is created in a country where surrogacy is allowed like India, Ukraine, Russia and Thailand.

Babies born to surrogates may also end up stateless if the "commissioning parents" reject it, Rajan said. This can happen if there is a fertility mix-up whereby the wrong sperm or egg was used, if the child is born with a disability, or if the parents divorce before the baby is born.

He suggested countries that ban surrogacy could find alternative ways to penalise parents who break the law without penalising the baby by denying it a nationality.

(Reporting by Emma Batha.)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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