By SONIA ALLEN
The story of baby Gammy and his “surrogate” mother has captured the world’s attention, highlighting just how complex and fraught commercial surrogacy arrangements can be. It also shows Australia is right to prohibit commercial surrogacy – and why other countries should do the same.
Gammy was born with Down Syndrome and a congenital heart condition. He is a twin, conceived as a result of a commercial surrogacy arrangement between an unidentified Australian couple (the “genetic parents”) and Pattaramon Chanbua, a Thai national whose family was struggling to pay off debts. Ms Chanbua was paid 350,000 baht (A$11,700) to carry and bear a child.
According to Ms Chanbua, when it was discovered she was carrying twins, she was offered an additional 70,000 Baht (A$2,000). But when doctors further discovered one of the babies had Down Syndrome, she was told to abort the affected twin. She refused on religious grounds and, after the twins’ birth, the Australian couple left with only the healthy girl.
The Australian father has since claimed the couple did not know about the other child. But Ms Chanbua states the father came to the hospital to see the twins. It’s unclear what role the surrogacy agency played.
However it played out, baby Gammy was left with Ms Chanbua, who loves and cares for him, but struggles to pay his medical expenses. The story has attracted international outrage, and a public campaign to raise money for baby Gammy’s care.
Top Comments
another looming surrogacy disaster.... http://www.sparklingadventu... google Global Gayby as well. For those who don't know, Lauren Fisher's son was killed by his father, by jumping off a bridge in QLD and drowning baby Elijah. He is now in a psychiatric hospital. Now pregnant with a boy "Gayby," Lauren will be flying to Iceland, having the baby (due around what would have been Elijah's 3rd birthday) and turning around and coming home again. Her 4 daughters, having already lost their brother and father, will be witnessing yet again another brother being lost to them.... Disaster in the making....
I am presently 20 weeks pregnant as a gestational surrogate for friends. I agree that commercial surrogacy is a murky and onerous affair that all too often exploits vulnerable women and lines the pockets of commercial agencies. However to improve options here in australia means creating a more accepted understanding and greater awareness of altruistic surrogacy. I am aware of other altruistic surrogates in Australia who've had the similar experience of having to explain over and over how the surrogacy works, jump countless bureaucratic loops and constantly questioned whether we are doing something illegal!! If more were aware of the many successful and positive altruistic surrogacy stories in Auatralia perhaps more people would pursue this option rather than commercial surrogacy overseas.