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Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Australia urges Cambodia to crack down on surrogacy services

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Overseas surrogacy battle moves into Cambodia (click on image to watch video)

Australia urges Cambodia to crack down on surrogacy services

Sydney Morning Herald | 2 August 2016

Bangkok: Australia has urged Cambodia to crackdown on commercial surrogacy as an increasing number of Australian couples ignore warnings not to seek surrogacy services in the country. 
Australian officials fear couples seeking to become biological parents of babies born to surrogate mothers will become entangled in Cambodia's murky and corrupt legal system. 
The south-east Asian country ruled by strongman Hun Sen has emerged as the latest hub of Asian surrogacy despite its authorities declaring in 2014 that engaging in or commissioning commercial surrogacy is human trafficking with penalties including imprisonment and fines.
Several dozen Australian couples are believed to have gone to Cambodia in the past year after commercial surrogacy was banned in Thailand, Nepal and India.
Many of the vitro fertilisation (IVF) doctors, lawyers and agencies chased out of Thailand after the Thai military shutdown the industry there following the Baby Gammy scandal in 2014 have relocated to Phnom Penh, where their businesses are again booming. 
Australia's ambassador in Cambodia Angela Corcoran urged that Cambodia take action on surrogacy and offered Australia's help in developing a draft law to regulate commercial surrogacy during talks with Cambodian officials last Friday.  
"The Australian side initiated the idea but my minister needs to study the possibility," Justice Ministry spokesman Kim Santepheap told theCambodia Daily
Mr Santepheap told the Phnom Penh Post that Australia's input focused on children's rights, adding that brokers who arrange surrogate pregnancies could still be prosecuted under the existing criminal code.
The case of baby Gammy, underlines why we shoudl reexamine Australian surrogacy laws.
The case of baby Gammy, underlines why we shoudl reexamine Australian surrogacy laws. Photo: AP
Until now Cambodian authorities have largely ignored surrogacy agencies in the capital which decline to speak openly about their practices to the media, apparently fearing a government crackdown or public backlash in the conservative and deeply Buddhist nation.
Mr Santepheap said the Justice Ministry has received no reports of surrogacy arrangements despite agencies boasting of successful births on their websites. 
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen Photo: AP
Several births are believed to be for Australian couples. 
One agency, New Genetics Global, says on its website that based on its review surrogacy is not a matter for the country's criminal code because it relates to adoptive parents, appearing to contradict the government's position. 
There is a lot of money to be made from surrogacy - but not by the surrogate.
There is a lot of money to be made from surrogacy - but not by the surrogate. Photo: Stocksy
Another called My Fertility Angel says it has a large pool of Cambodian and Thai surrogate mothers "who are ready to help childless parents in order to make their dream of parenthood come true."
US-headquartered Surrogacy Cambodia offers a US$10,000 cash rebate upon signing up for a surrogacy program. 
Pattaramon Chanbua, 21, with her son Gammy in 2014. The Baby Gammy scandal led to Thailand closing surrogacy clinics ...
Pattaramon Chanbua, 21, with her son Gammy in 2014. The Baby Gammy scandal led to Thailand closing surrogacy clinics across the nation and driving clients to Cambodia.  Photo: AP
Sam Everingham, the founder and director of Families Through Surrogacy, an Australian-based surrogacy group, described Australia's move as a "really encouraging development" at a time that Canberra has failed to reform domestic surrogacy.
He said laws need to protect the rights of the unborn child, the surrogate and most importantly, provide legal certainty for parents. 
"Having said that the practical ability to police such laws in developing countries is doubtful," he said. 
"In Nepal we saw Australian authorities increasingly stepping in to conduct their own investigations where surrogate identification documents, for example, were inadequate."
Many of the surrogates in Cambodia are not Cambodian residents but Thai women bypassing laws that criminalise commercial surrogacy in Thailand, raising the possibility of legal problems blocking parents taking their babies home from Phnom Penh.  
Some Cambodian women have been recruited but IVF and surrogacy are not socially condoned or widely understood in Cambodia. 
Mr Everingham said in countries where surrogacy has been banned Australia's diplomatic missions have had to devote huge amounts of manpower to assist with the processing and citizenship of newborns. 
After the Thai government banned surrogacy more than 200 Australian couples found themselves in limbo with their babies, unable to take them home until Australia made representations to Thai authorities. 
An Australian parliamentary committee found in April an average 250 couples who had exhausted all other options to have a child travel overseas each year to enter into arrangements with surrogate mothers, despite that doing so is an offence in Queensland, New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory. 
The committee noted that legal, economic and social conditions in countries with weak regulatory systems greatly increase the risk that the right to the child, and of the birth mother, may be infringed, in particular raising concerns about unethical agencies effectively trafficking in children.
The committee found the birth mother may also be vulnerable to exploitation, health risks and pressure to undergo risky procedures to which she may not otherwise consent, including multiple embryo transfers, caesarean deliveries and abortions. 
Mr Everingham said it was disappointing the committee played it safe, simply recommending a further inquiry and setting up of a task force.  
"Reforming our domestic laws is an absolute priority, given some Australians are simply forced to go off shore, given the complete lack of access at home," he said.
"However domestic reform won't stop demand for offshore arrangements completely."
Australia's smartraveller.gov.au advises Australians not to visit Cambodia for the purpose of engaging in commercial surrogacy.
"We strongly caution Australians to consider all legal and other risks involved in pursuing international surrogacy," the advice says.
"You should be aware that the regulatory environment in a host country may change without warning," it said. 
"The absence of rules and regulations governing surrogacy in some countries should not be seen as condoning commercial surrogacy….the risks of entering into such arrangements in less regulated markets are high."




1 comment:

  1. Anonymous6:35 AM

    In America, 60 million babies has been killed by Democracy. All about the baby's rights? "OK mommy, I want to be murder so you can have your freedom!"

    ReplyDelete