February 6, 2024

The surrogancy (Regulation) Bill, 2019 

This Article has been written by Shilpi Sharma of 2nd year from Lloyd Law College, Greater Noida.

Surrogacy (Regulation) Bill, 2019 has been introduced in the Lok Sabha. The Bill aims to prohibit commercial surrogacy in India.

Commercial surrogacy, a practice also known as ‘Rent a Womb’, was legalised in India in the year 2002, in order to promote medical tourism. And soon, India became the hub of surrogacy. Driven by factors like low cost and the absence of a strict legislation, commercial surrogacy became a booming business in the country.

According to a 2012 study by the Confederation of Indian Industry, the size of India’s surrogate motherhood industry was $2 billion a year. Another 2012 study backed by the United Nations estimated the economic scale of the Indian surrogacy industry to be 400 million dollars a year with more than 3,000 fertility clinics across the country.

However, the unregulated business of surrogacy led to concerns over the rampant exploitation of surrogate mothers as well as their children, prompting the need for a legislation to regulate surrogacy in the country.

Features of the Surrogacy (Regulation) Bill, 2019

  • It provides for constitution of surrogacy boards at the national as well as state levels to ensure effective regulation.
  • It seeks to allow ethical altruistic surrogacy to the intending infertile Indian married couple between the age of 23-50 years for female and 26-55 years for male.
  • Only Indian couples who have been legally married for at least 5 years would be allowed to opt for surrogacy.
  • It makes it mandatory for the couple to obtain a certificate of essentiality and also a certificate of eligibility before going ahead with surrogacy. It also provides that intending couples should not abandon the child born out of surrogacy under any condition.
  • It also stipulates a separate eligibility criterion for the surrogate mother.
    • The surrogate must be a close relative of the intending couple and be a married woman having a child of her own.
    • She should between the age of 25-35 years, not have been surrogate earlier and must be certifiably mentally and physically fit.
  • On the legal status of a surrogate child, the Bill states that any child born out of a surrogacy procedure shall be the biological child of the intending couple.
    • The newborn child shall be entitled to all rights and privileges that are available to a natural child.
  • The Bill also seeks to regulate functioning of surrogacy clinics. All surrogacy clinics in the country need to be registered by the appropriate authority in order to undertake surrogacy or its related procedures.
  • The Bill provides for various safeguards for surrogate mothers. One of them is insurance coverage for some time to cover not only the period of pregnancy but after that also.
  • It also specifies that no sex selection can be done when it comes to surrogacy.

Background

  • In recent years, India has emerged as a surrogacy hub for couples from other countries.
  • There were multiple reports concerning unethical practices, exploitation of surrogate mothers, abandonment of children born out of surrogacy and rackets involving intermediaries importing human embryos and gametes prompting the need for a stringent law on surrogacy.
    • The surrogates generally turn out to be poor illiterate women of rural background who are persuaded by their spouse or middlemen to enter such deals to earn easy money. These women have no power to decide about their own body and life.
    • After recruitment by the commercial agencies, these women are shifted to hostels on the pretext of taking antenatal care. The real motive is to cart them and avoid social stigma of being made outcaste by their community. These women end up spending the whole tenure of pregnancy worrying about their household and children.
    • The worst part is that in case of unfavourable outcome of the pregnancy they are unlikely to be paid and there is no provision of insurance or post-pregnancy medical and psychiatric support for them.
    • Due to lack of proper legislation, sometimes, both surrogate mothers and intended parents are exploited. Only middlemen and commercial agencies profit from the arrangement.
    • The most unequal party in the surrogacy contract, however, remains the child that results from it. There are also incidents when the child given to the couple after surrogacy is not genetically related and in turn is disowned by the intended parent and the child has to spend his/her life in an orphanage.
  • The Law Commission of India also highlighted the need to enact such a law. In its 208th report, the commission recommended prohibiting commercial surrogacy citing concerns over the prevalent use of surrogacy by foreigners and the lack of a proper legal framework resulting in exploitation of the surrogate mother who may have been coerced to become a surrogate due to poverty and lack of education.

Criticism of the Bill

  • It prevents same sex couples from having surrogate children even though there is a credible scientific research to show that same sex parents are as good as hetrosexual parents, thus violating the Article 14 of the Constitution.
  • The Bill also violates the Puttaswamy judgement of the Supreme Court (Right to privacy was added in the list of fundamental rights guaranteed by the Constitution).
  • The eligibility condition under the Bill amounts to unreasonable restriction on the reproductive rights of a married Indian couple, violative of Article 21 of the constitution.

Surrogacy

  • It occurs when a woman agrees to gestate a baby for another couple or individual.
  • There are two kinds of surrogacy- gestational and traditional.
  • In gestational surrogacy the embryo that is fertilised by the in-vitro method is implanted into the uterus of the surrogate mother who then carries and delivers the baby.
    • Gestational surrogacy became popular in India due to advances in reproductive medicine, a large pool of impoverished women and low cost compared to countries such as the United States, Canada and Australia.
  • In traditional surrogacy, the surrogate mother is impregnated with the sperm of the intended father artificially which makes her both the genetic and gestational mother.
  • Surrogacy can be commercial or altruistic depending upon whether the surrogate is paid money for her pregnancy.
  • The world has warmed up to the concept of surrogacy that allows childless couples or single persons to become parents.
  • Most countries allowing surrogacy have framed their own laws for regulating surrogacy and also protecting the rights of surrogate as well as the child.

Problems Associated with Cross-Border Surrogacy

  • For cross border childless couples, not only do they have to cope up with the language barrier, they sometimes have to fight long legal battles to get their children.
  • Cross border surrogacy also leads to problems in citizenship, nationality, motherhood, parentage and rights of a child. Children are at times denied nationality of the country of the intended parents.
  • Lack of an international law on surrogacy creates complications for surrogates as well as intending parents. It is quite possible that there are different surrogacy laws in the home country and the country where the baby is born.
  • Many experts argue that an international agreement similar to the Hague Adoption Convention could provide consistency across countries thereby making the process more streamlined.

Laws Governing Surrogacy in Different Countries

  • While countries like Britain, America, Australia, the Netherlands and Denmark are among those where altruistic surrogacy is legal, countries such as France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Portugal and Bulgaria prohibit all forms of surrogacy.
  • Armenia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Russia, Ukraine allow both altruistic and commercial surrogacy.
  • Kenya, Malaysia and Nigeria do not prohibit surrogacy but have no formal law to regulate the practice.
  • The Czech Republic, Colombia, Chile and Hungary are among countries with unregulated surrogacy.

In Britain

  • Commercial Surrogacy is not legal in the United Kingdom.
  • The surrogate is the child’s legal parent at birth. Legal parenthood can be transferred by parental order or adoption only once the child is born.

In USA

  • The surrogacy laws vary from state to state.
  • Surrogacy friendly states allow both commercial and altruistic surrogacy. Arkansas, California, New Hampshire are some such surrogacy-friendly states.
  • New York does not allow commercial surrogacy and Michigan forbids absolutely all surrogacy agreements.

In Canada

  • Canada’s Assisted Human Reproduction Act permits only altruistic surrogacy.
  • Surrogate mothers may be reimbursed only for approved expenses.
  • However, all surrogacy arrangements are illegal in Quebec in Canada.

Analysis of the Surrogacy (Regulation) Bill

  • The Bill defines surrogacy as a practice in which a woman gives birth to a child for an intending couple with the intention of handing over the child after birth to the intending couple. 
  • The Bill bans commercial surrogacy, but it does allow altruistic surrogacy. Altruistic surrogacy does not involve monetary compensation to the surrogate mother other than the medical expenses and insurance coverage during the course of the pregnancy. Commercial surrogacy is surrogacy or such related procedures undertaken for a monetary reward or benefit (in cash or in-kind) apart from the basic medical expenses and insurance coverage. 
  • Surrogacy is allowed when it is: (i) for intending couples who suffer from proven infertility; (ii) altruistic; (iii) not for commercial purposes; (iv) not for producing children for sale, prostitution or other forms of exploitation; and (v) for any disease or condition specified through regulations. 
  • The intending couple should have the following issued by the appropriate authority:
  • Certificate of essentiality
  • Certificate of eligibility
  • certificate of essentiality will be issued if the following conditions are fulfilled:
  • A certificate of proven infertility of 1 or both members of the intending couple from a District Medical Board; 
  • An order of parentage and custody of the surrogate child passed by a Magistrate’s court; and 
  • Insurance coverage for sixteen months that cover postpartum delivery complications for the surrogate mother. 
  • The certificate of eligibility to the intending couple will be issued upon fulfilment of the following conditions: 
  • The couple should be Indian citizens and married for at least 5 years; 
  • the wife should be between 23 and 50 years old and the husband should be between 26 and 55 years old; 
  • The couple does not have any surviving child (biological, adopted or surrogate); this would not include a child who is mentally or physically challenged or suffers from life-threatening disorder or fatal illness; and 
  • Other conditions that may be specified by regulations. 
  • To obtain a certificate of eligibility from the appropriate authority, the surrogate mother has to be: 
  • A close relative of the intending couple; 
  • A married woman with her own child; 
  • 25 to 35 years old; 
  • A surrogate only once in her lifetime; and 
  • Having a certificate of medical and psychological fitness for surrogacy. 
  • Further, the surrogate mother cannot offer her own gametes for surrogacy.
  • Surrogacy clinics can undertake surrogacy procedures only if they are registered by the appropriate authority. Clinics must apply for registration within sixty days from the date of appointment of the appropriate authority. 
  • The central government shall constitute the National Surrogacy Board (NSB) and the state governments shall constitute the State Surrogacy Boards (SSB). 
  • Functions of the NSB include the following:
  • Advising the union govt. on policy matters relating to surrogacy; 
  • Establishing a code of conduct for surrogacy clinics; and
  • Supervising the functioning of SSBs. 
  • The offences under the Bill include: (i) undertaking or advertising commercial surrogacy; (ii) exploiting the surrogate mother; (iii) abandoning, exploiting or disowning a surrogate child; and (iv) selling or importing human embryo or gametes for surrogacy. The penalty for such offences is imprisonment up to ten years and a fine up to ten lakh rupees. The Bill also specifies a range of offences and penalties for other contraventions of its provisions. 

 

Concerns

  • A UN-backed study conducted in July 2012 put the surrogacy business at over $400 million with more than 3000 fertility clinics all over the country. Foreign nationals, who want to escape tough surrogacy laws in their own countries, come to India in search of poor vulnerable women, who can be used for renting their wombs to produce a baby for a petty amount of money very easily in the absence of regulations. The global surrogacy trade has become embroiled in many scandals. 
  • This regulation tries to put an end to some of the problems related to surrogacy. However, concerns remain that due to these regulations a black market might be created of willing women who may not have received approval from any appropriate authority.

 

REFERNCES:

  1. BYJUS 
  2. DRISHTI IAS
  3. WIKIPEDIA
  4. IPLEADERS
  5. LAWOCOPTUS
  6. LAW SIKHO

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