Gestational surrogacy is the use of "carrier mothers," something quite debated in France. Some countries have put it in place at all due speed. In India, an immense clinic is about to be unveiled in Anand, in the province of Gujarat, under the direction of Nayna Patel, a female doctor who specializes in in-vitro fertilization. She has degrees from Singapore, England, and South Korea. The business will engage hundreds of wombs for rent, at the disposal of infertile western couples who want to conceive a child.
According to BBC news, the Indian market for surrogacy is estimated at US$1 billion, in a country where a third of the population subsists on $6 a day. To carry a child, a woman may look forward to being paid 8000 dollars.
Interviewed by BBC, Ashok, the husband of one of these mothers-for-rent, is overjoyed at buying a house with this money: "My parents will be happy that their son and his wife have been able to build a house. Our social status will go up, that's a plus." (more...)
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