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‘I can’t sleep at night’: Chinese mothers speak of worries as COVID-19 leaves their surrogate babies stranded

by The Editor
September 22, 2020
in Asia
0
‘I can’t sleep at night’: Chinese mothers speak of worries as COVID-19 leaves their surrogate babies stranded

BEIJING: Cherry Lin wistfully strokes a baby romper, fretting it may be too small for a son she is yet to meet – one of hundreds of Chinese mothers estranged from babies born to commercial surrogates overseas after the coronavirus forced border closures.

China banned all forms of surrogacy – both commercial and altruistic – in 2001 due to concerns poor women were being exploited.

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But for US$35,000 to US$75,000, couples can seek women abroad, from Laos and Russia, to Ukraine, Georgia and the US, to carry their babies.

The system has been tipped into chaos by the pandemic, which has seen borders closed, flights cancelled and visas pulled, creating a "pile-up" of newborns waiting to be picked up by their biological Chinese parents.

It has also revived the black market for surrogacy inside China.

"Baby dens" with dozens of newborns in orphanages or apartments have been found as the backlog builds, according to surrogacy agencies in Russia and Ukraine.

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"I can't sleep at night thinking my baby is stuck in an orphanage," Lin, who opted for surrogacy after suffering several miscarriages, told AFP from the southern Chinese city of Chengdu.

Her baby was born in St Petersburg in June, three months after Russia closed its border with China to curb the spread of the coronavirus.

"We don't know how long we have to wait," she concedes.

Rising incomes, high rates of infertility and the desire for old couples – well past their reproductive age – to have a son after China scrapped its one-child rule in 2016 has fuelled the demand for foreign surrogates.

Lin, a 38-year-old lawyer, and her husband travelled to Russia last year for in-vitro fertilisation (IVF) and to sign a contract with a surrogacy company.

Once the pregnancy was confirmed she shopped for baby products, and even took an infant first aid course.

But her plans unravelled as the virus swept the globe, dropping her into "a nightmare", where she receives fragments of her newborn's first weeks through photos and video clips sent by the surrogacy agency.

LOSING PRECIOUS TIME

China's foreign ministry and the Russian embassy in Beijing did not respond to AFP queries about what they were doing to help Chinese parents bring their babies home.

And there are no official figures on how many Chinese babies born to surrogates are stranded abroad.

But a video posted in June by surrogacy service BioTexCom in Ukraine showing rows of babies in cribs in a hotel pointed to the scale of the crisis.

READ: After long delay, parents finally meet surrogate baby in Ukraine

Nearly half of the 46 babies belonged to Chinese clients, a BioTexCom spokesperson told AFP.

Authorities have since issued special permits for biological parents to claim their children despite border closures.

But that is not enough for Li Mingxia, whose son was born in May in Kiev.

Quarantine requirements and infrequent flights mean she is still unlikely to reach him until late November.

"I will miss the first six months of his life," Li explains, adding: "I can't get that back."

Nurses hold a baby at a birth centre in Beijing, China. (File photo: AFP/Greg Baker)

Most babies born abroad do not have birth certificates since their parents are unable to travel to take the DNA tests needed to prove parentage.

Russian and Ukrainian police have also started raiding the baby dens – apartments where five or six undocumented babies are being looked after by one nanny – amid fears of human trafficking, Russian state media reported.

"When the police find several Chinese babies without any identification papers living in a house with a stranger, it looks like you are selling babies for organ harvesting," said Dmitriy Sitzko, China marketing manager for Vera Surrogacy Centre in St Petersburg, who worked with Lin.

Lin's agency found a spot at a state-run orphanage to care for her baby for free.

But some agencies in Russia charge parents anywhere between 7,000 to 21,000 yuan (US$1,000 to US$3,000) a month, Sitzko said.

CELEBRITIES NORMALISE SURROGACY

Nearly one in four couples of reproductive age in China suffered from infertility, according to the Global Burden of Disease study published in medical journal The Lancet in 2017.

Some studies have linked high levels of pollution to declining male fertility, while women are choosing to delay motherhood due to the high costs of living, restrictive maternity policies and high childcare costs.

READ: China's 2019 birth rate slowest in 70 years

Surrogacy is sometimes chosen when fertility treatments, such as IVF, do not work for the couple or if they are unable to carry a child.

Stars such as Elton John, Cristiano Ronaldo, Nicole Kidman and Kim Kardashian West have said they have used surrogates to expand their families, raising the profile of the practice – but it remains controversial.

The UN has warned commercial surrogacy risked turning children into "commodities" and called for better regulation in places where it is legal.

"There is no right to have a child under international law. Children are not goods or services that the State can guarantee or provide. They are human beings with rights," Maud de Boer-Buquicchio, Special Rapporteur on the sale and sexual exploitation of children, said in a 2018 report.

Only a handful of countries allow international surrogacy.

AFP interviews with 15 surrogacy service providers found it costs about US$35,000 to US$50,000 for surrogacy in Ukraine and Georgia, US$73,000 in Russia and US$200,000 in California, one of the few US states where it is legal.

Ukraine is one of the few countries that Read More – Source

channel news asia

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BEIJING: Cherry Lin wistfully strokes a baby romper, fretting it may be too small for a son she is yet to meet – one of hundreds of Chinese mothers estranged from babies born to commercial surrogates overseas after the coronavirus forced border closures.

China banned all forms of surrogacy – both commercial and altruistic – in 2001 due to concerns poor women were being exploited.

Advertisement

Advertisement

But for US$35,000 to US$75,000, couples can seek women abroad, from Laos and Russia, to Ukraine, Georgia and the US, to carry their babies.

The system has been tipped into chaos by the pandemic, which has seen borders closed, flights cancelled and visas pulled, creating a "pile-up" of newborns waiting to be picked up by their biological Chinese parents.

It has also revived the black market for surrogacy inside China.

"Baby dens" with dozens of newborns in orphanages or apartments have been found as the backlog builds, according to surrogacy agencies in Russia and Ukraine.

Advertisement

Advertisement

"I can't sleep at night thinking my baby is stuck in an orphanage," Lin, who opted for surrogacy after suffering several miscarriages, told AFP from the southern Chinese city of Chengdu.

Her baby was born in St Petersburg in June, three months after Russia closed its border with China to curb the spread of the coronavirus.

"We don't know how long we have to wait," she concedes.

Rising incomes, high rates of infertility and the desire for old couples – well past their reproductive age – to have a son after China scrapped its one-child rule in 2016 has fuelled the demand for foreign surrogates.

Lin, a 38-year-old lawyer, and her husband travelled to Russia last year for in-vitro fertilisation (IVF) and to sign a contract with a surrogacy company.

Once the pregnancy was confirmed she shopped for baby products, and even took an infant first aid course.

But her plans unravelled as the virus swept the globe, dropping her into "a nightmare", where she receives fragments of her newborn's first weeks through photos and video clips sent by the surrogacy agency.

LOSING PRECIOUS TIME

China's foreign ministry and the Russian embassy in Beijing did not respond to AFP queries about what they were doing to help Chinese parents bring their babies home.

And there are no official figures on how many Chinese babies born to surrogates are stranded abroad.

But a video posted in June by surrogacy service BioTexCom in Ukraine showing rows of babies in cribs in a hotel pointed to the scale of the crisis.

READ: After long delay, parents finally meet surrogate baby in Ukraine

Nearly half of the 46 babies belonged to Chinese clients, a BioTexCom spokesperson told AFP.

Authorities have since issued special permits for biological parents to claim their children despite border closures.

But that is not enough for Li Mingxia, whose son was born in May in Kiev.

Quarantine requirements and infrequent flights mean she is still unlikely to reach him until late November.

"I will miss the first six months of his life," Li explains, adding: "I can't get that back."

Nurses hold a baby at a birth centre in Beijing, China. (File photo: AFP/Greg Baker)

Most babies born abroad do not have birth certificates since their parents are unable to travel to take the DNA tests needed to prove parentage.

Russian and Ukrainian police have also started raiding the baby dens – apartments where five or six undocumented babies are being looked after by one nanny – amid fears of human trafficking, Russian state media reported.

"When the police find several Chinese babies without any identification papers living in a house with a stranger, it looks like you are selling babies for organ harvesting," said Dmitriy Sitzko, China marketing manager for Vera Surrogacy Centre in St Petersburg, who worked with Lin.

Lin's agency found a spot at a state-run orphanage to care for her baby for free.

But some agencies in Russia charge parents anywhere between 7,000 to 21,000 yuan (US$1,000 to US$3,000) a month, Sitzko said.

CELEBRITIES NORMALISE SURROGACY

Nearly one in four couples of reproductive age in China suffered from infertility, according to the Global Burden of Disease study published in medical journal The Lancet in 2017.

Some studies have linked high levels of pollution to declining male fertility, while women are choosing to delay motherhood due to the high costs of living, restrictive maternity policies and high childcare costs.

READ: China's 2019 birth rate slowest in 70 years

Surrogacy is sometimes chosen when fertility treatments, such as IVF, do not work for the couple or if they are unable to carry a child.

Stars such as Elton John, Cristiano Ronaldo, Nicole Kidman and Kim Kardashian West have said they have used surrogates to expand their families, raising the profile of the practice – but it remains controversial.

The UN has warned commercial surrogacy risked turning children into "commodities" and called for better regulation in places where it is legal.

"There is no right to have a child under international law. Children are not goods or services that the State can guarantee or provide. They are human beings with rights," Maud de Boer-Buquicchio, Special Rapporteur on the sale and sexual exploitation of children, said in a 2018 report.

Only a handful of countries allow international surrogacy.

AFP interviews with 15 surrogacy service providers found it costs about US$35,000 to US$50,000 for surrogacy in Ukraine and Georgia, US$73,000 in Russia and US$200,000 in California, one of the few US states where it is legal.

Ukraine is one of the few countries that Read More – Source

channel news asia

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