Tuesday, January 14, 2025
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Taiwan couples seek surrogacy abroad to escape ban

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Taipei: Three years ago Mr and Ms Lee fulfilled their dream of parenthood with the help of a surrogate mother.

But like many Taiwanese couples in their position, they were forced to seek surrogacy abroad because the procedure is illegal at home. “Healthy couples cannot imagine the difficulty and pain we have been through. We tried everything we could,” said Lee, a 40-year-old businessman in Taipei who did not wish to give his full name.

He and his 35-year-old wife also considered adoption. “But since there was still a way we could have our own child, surrogacy was the best option,” he said. “We envied other couples who have children and we finally felt that our lives were complete when our son was born,” he said.

A bill to legalise altruistic surrogacy in which a woman agrees to carry a child for another couple through In vitro fertilisation without financially profiting from the procedure remains in limbo in Taiwan, forcing couples like the Lees into the global commercial surrogacy market. The island is divided over the controversial and sensitive issue, which presents a legal and ethical minefield for experts who have failed to agree on issues such as the rights of the surrogate mother, biological parents and the foetus.

Those who broker or make financial gains from embryo reproduction face a possible two-year jail term, although there is no penalty for those who pay for it, according to prosecutors.

The legality of surrogacy varies widely around the world, particularly in Asia where commercial for-profit surrogacy services are prohibited in many countries. India is an exception, where the government is in the process of passing laws to regulate a fertility industry that offers foreign couples cheaper alternatives to options such as the US and Britain. Altruistic surrogacy options are legally available in Australia subject to strict screening processes.

China prohibits surrogacy, while Japan, South Korea and Thailand have no laws in place determining the rights of participants. Taiwan’s health authorities first contemplated legalising surrogacy about a decade ago and drafted a bill in 2005 but there has been no real progress since then. (PTI)

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