DOI: https://doi.org/10.20529/IJME.2010.079
New legislation can be oppressive for a significant population depending upon the politics of its drafters. The current upsurge of the surrogacy trade in India, and the label of a “win-win” situation that it has acquired, points towards an unfettered commercialisation of assisted reproductive technology and the practice of surrogacy that is blinding its middle class users as well as providers, policy makers and law makers, and charging an imagination that is already caught up in spiralling consumerism. This paper analyses the Draft Assisted Reproductive Technology (Regulation) Bill and Rules, 2008, in the Indian socioeconomic context. It identifies the interests of the affected women, and examines the contradictions of the proposed Bill with their interests, as well as with current health and population policies, confining itself to the handling of surrogacy and not the entire content of the Bill. The bases of the analytical perspective used are: the context of poverty and the health needs of the Indian population; the need to locate surrogacy services within the overall public health service context and its epidemiological basis; the need to restrain direct human experimentation for the advancement of any technology; the use of safer methods; and, finally, the rights of surrogate mothers and their babies, in India, as opposed to the compulsion or dynamics of the medical market and reproductive tourism.
According to a report of the 18th Law Commission of India, “Law is to act as ardent defender of human liberty and an instrument of distribution of positive entitlements.” (1:7) Nelson Mandela addressing the special convocation held in his honour in 1990 at the Jawaharlal Nehru University,made a deep impression on us when he questioned the sanctity of law and said it must be challenged when it becomes oppressive. This wisdom coming from a lawyer with a difference highlights the role legislation plays in a society riddled with conflicts; liberating for some and oppressive for others. Notwithstanding the Law Commission’s idealism, new legislation too could be oppressive for a significant population depending upon the politics of its drafters. The current upsurge of the surrogacy trade in India, and the label of a “win-win” situation that it has acquired, points towards an unfettered commercialisation of Assisted Reproductive Technology (ART) and the practice of surrogacy that is blinding its middle class users as well as providers, policy makers and law makers, and charging an imagination that is already caught up in spiralling consumerism.
The aura of the high-tech has overshadowed the exploitation of less-privileged women. There was, thus, little public dissent to the several regressive proposals regarding surrogacy in the Draft Assisted Reproductive Technology Regulation Bill, 2008 (2), and it was proclaimed that women accepted it out of their own free will. Stories abound of this free will: economic pressures forcing women into surrogacy; a relative needing a kidney transplant; buying a taxi to run the household; or the decision to give schooling or a house to her children (3). She is ‘fed up of her poverty’, becomes the rationale for providers who argue that, just as medical technology is cheap in the Third World, so too are surrogacy arrangements that help families to overcome financial constraints (3). There are also stories of surrogates clinging on to the commissioning parents, demanding more and more, and even refusing to part with the baby. This disturbs the clients and their providers whose business and reputation is at stake. These so called dirty workers are then unable to fight discrimination, not only because they are dependent (4), but also because the State itself is not concerned about exploitation, false promises, misuse of techniques, and, above all, about the loss of ethical principles in the present practices as well as in its law – the proposed Draft Assisted Reproductive Technology (Regulation) Bill and Rules, 2008 – that lacks even a preamble.
This paper identifies the interests of the affected women, and examines the contradictions of the proposed Bill with their interests, as well as with current health and population policies. The critique is confined to the handling of surrogacy and does not discuss the entire content of the Bill. The bases of the analytical perspective (5) used are: the context of poverty and the health needs of the Indian population; the need to locate surrogacy services within the overall public health service context and its epidemiological basis (6); the need to restrain direct human experimentation for the advancement of any technology; the use of safer methods; and, finally, the rights of surrogate mothers and their babies, in India, as opposed to the compulsion or dynamics of the medical market and reproductive tourism.
The practice of surrogacy can be ethical only if the interests of the baby, the gestational mother, the commissioning parents, and science itself are located within this framework. The proposed Bill not only disregards these but also negates a number of important state policies. If legislated, it could make these policies irrelevant. The central issue, therefore, is: what perspective must guide the practice of surrogacy?
The vulnerability of the baby can be enhanced if the surrogacy process is not sensitive to the issues of child rights. These rights are: i) the right to bonding, breast feeding for a minimum period of three to six months, and early psychological and immunological development while prescribing the time of separation; ii) the right to survival like any other baby, including a baby with disability or born of a multiple pregnancy; this cannot be undermined by the whims of the commissioning parents; iii) the right to a safe home as an obligation of a state that permits surrogacy in cases where both sets of parents refuse to accept the baby, and iv) the right of babies to know their identity; as an early acceptance of their status helps their socialisation and acquisition of a sense of belonging. Discovering parentage late or accidentally is more damaging than knowing the truth in an open and frank environment. Secrecy and misinformation are born out of the notion of priority of biological associations over socio-psychological ones.
Voluntary acceptance of surrogacy requires that women have self respect and social status born out of equal opportunities, adequate wages, and freedom of decision making. It should not be an alternate employment generation scheme. It would be a mistake to evolve legislation on the basis of systemic weaknesses and failures, or for lawmakers to assume that volunteerism under conditions of poverty is genuine. In the present context, surrogacy is rarely voluntary. Hence, one needs to know what payments have been made for, and to articulate the difference between commercial and voluntary surrogacy.
In the best traditions of liberal thought, the concepts of minimum wages and compensation were understood separately. One was: money payment during the period of employment that would provide a family unit a level of survival that is socially acceptable; and the other was payment for permanent or temporary disability and for death (7). A third kind of money exchange, that is now included, is coverage of expenses for an altruistic act of humanism, as in organ transplants, where expenses of donors are born by the family receiving help. But normal pregnancy is neither a disease nor a disability; hence the issue of ‘compensation’ for pregnancy does not arise.
The compensation can only be for the handing over of – or separation from – the baby, for damage caused to the mother in case of complications and medical negligence, and in the event of the mother’s death. This should include compensation to the family, which is denied her care while contributing to mother and baby care during the period of surrogacy. Women are, in fact, being forced to become captives of clinics in the name of their protection and care. In addition, for nurturing the baby, the surrogate should earn wages[ss1] for the time and energy invested in pregnancy and baby care. Coverage of expenses for surrogacy would mean all services for the surrogate. Apart from all medical expenses, it should include, as in the West, her life insurance, counselling and legal expenses, travel charges, psychological evaluation, adequate food, and health insurance for the family that is involved in providing care while the baby is with them (8). In voluntary surrogacy then, at most, coverage of expenses and part of compensation could be paid, while in commercial surrogacy all of these are the surrogate’s due.
We now examine the notion of wages for, and product’s of, surrogacy. The global market has made Third World labour a resource for its growth as it is cheap. This principle has been thoughtlessly transferred to surrogacy where the procreative labour of the surrogate woman is equated to social labour of human beings. The product is a commodity or a service in one case, and a human baby – the future of mankind – in the other. To compare these forms of labour and product is untenable as the latter is a biological process linked to human, biological, psychological, and emotional energies continuously invested over a period of time, that affects the whole being. This cannot be put at par with skill-based physical labour of the former. Similarly, while an Indian commodity may have lower value as a product of low-cost raw material, technology, and human labour, the value of life of a surrogate baby cannot be lower in India as its human potential – and the maternal energies that nurture it – are the same globally. The value of surrogate motherhood (as wages) and the surrogate baby (as compensation) is thus universal. It cannot be measured regionally. At best it can be given a universal arbitrary value, as there is no way that the human potential of a baby can be assessed at birth, nor can gestation be different in different countries.
This obfuscation of the difference between a commodity and a human baby, and between social and procreative labour, has provided the rationale for justifying two assumptions. First, the priority of the rights of owners of genetic material over the surrogate’s gestational rights in the true eugenic tradition; second, the undermining of surrogate gestation as ‘services provided’ and labelling it as cheap labour. This logic is unacceptable and unethical as it denies the universal value of life for all babies, and the value of gestation, which is labour extraordinaire.
While ARTs have transformed genetic material – so critical within the eugenic perspective of parenthood – into an acquirable commodity, the key dimensions of motherhood remain gestational and social mothering. The modern understanding of foetal and infant growth has also shown the importance of early bonding (9) that in fact begins in the uterus, and of breast feeding (10), both critical for emotional and physical development and immunological protection of the baby. This need for biological continuity in baby care places responsibility not only on the mother but, more so, on the doctors who advise her.
It is the state’s ethical responsibility, then, to come clean about definitions, valuations and payments if it is promoting commercial surrogacy. To use the language of voluntarism and hence deny payments is to cover up its own business interests and its neo-liberal paradigm.
If one of the sexual partners is infertile, that couple is called infertile. However, this malaise is generally assumed to afflict women alone, even though in India, according to the president of Indian society of ART, it is estimated that 40-50% of infertility afflicts the male and about 15% remains unexplained (11). The problem of female infertility in India arises primarily out of poor health and health services as, of the estimated 8-10% infertile women, 98% have secondary sterility caused by infections such as post-partum infections, tubercular infections, reproductive tract infections, complications of delivery, and poor nutritional status. Most of these can be avoided through effective primary healthcare with basic services for diagnosing and treating conditions causing infertility. Reproductive tourism distorts these priorities.
Women requiring the help of a surrogate mother should have the right as well as the responsibility of participating in the care of the surrogate mother and the custody of the baby to ensure the smooth transfer and socio-psychological preparedness of the second mother. The veil of secrecy and separation of the two mothers will be antithetical to this desirable mode of transition. Also, the right of couples of the same sex needs to be protected.
Couples of the same sex – despite their fertility – need donors or surrogates; their primary problem therefore is to be legally recognised as couples, to seek ART or surrogacy services. To force them to lie by calling themselves single parents is to treat them differently, a travesty of their constitutional rights to equality and justice.
Last but not least, the adoption laws need to be improved and streamlined to encourage adoption. Access to adoption services for all religious groups should be made possible.
The Draft ART Bill, 2008 is reviewed in the light of the above understanding of ethical and social concerns. Its Drafting Committee was constituted of three lawyers from the Public Interest Legal Support and Research Centre (PILSARC) including its trustee; four representatives of service providers including the famous ART clinic, Rotunda; three government representatives; an eminent molecular biologist as its chairperson, and an Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR)officer as member-secretary. Representatives of women’s organisations, consumer’s groups, public sector obstetric and paediatric service providers, and experts in ethics, child development and child psychology, were conspicuous by their absence.
The Draft Bill helps the state abdicate its responsibilities and protect and promote provider’s and commissioning parent’s interests in the free market by giving extraordinary powers to private sperm banks and clinics as against the surrogate mother. It does not ensure that all social groups within the country have equal access to this service and is actually geared to promote reproductive tourism and further open medical markets. Even the role of the proposed State Boards in providing the necessary counselling and legal assistance to surrogate women for a fair deal is not defined. As a consequence, the Draft bill neglects the interests of the baby and the surrogate mother and shrouds the challenge that ART poses to archaic social structures by conforming to traditional norms of a patriarchal society. It promotes and pushes ART as a desirable intervention, rather than trying to effectively regulate and monitor it. Its discrepancies, contradictions and directions can be gauged by the following observations around these two sets of issues.
Thus, instead of testing the donors twice, this simple transfer of risk burden reduces the cost for the dominant controlling parties.
What is said to the surrogate remains unrecorded. The agreement for surrogacy (Form J) makes the woman accept that she will agree to foetal reduction if asked for by the party seeking surrogacy but makes no mention of the risks involved.
The principles of existing social and population policy (18) are negated by the draft ART Regulation Bill. The key areas of this negation are:
The bill ignores both the ethical and conceptual issues raised in the earlier sections as well as the contradictions it generates vis- a-vis national policies. This reflects its ideological moorings in the neo-liberal developmental shifts of the post 1980s era. It underlines the historical truth that legislations are not guided by ethical principles alone; they are primarily a product of changing socio-political balances. The dominant interests use their own rationality to redefine concepts, reinterpret ethics, and deal with social conflicts. In the case of surrogacy itself, the draft bill defines it as “a pregnancy achieved through ART, in which neither of the gametes belong to her or her husband.” (2:3) Thus, a woman can now either donate eggs or be a surrogate but not both as was the case earlier. In this change of definition, advanced technologies have replaced simpler pre-existing modes of surrogacy, and removed conflicts of interest around high-tech ART. That surrogacy has been clubbed with ART in itself reveals that it is seen more as an instrument for advancement of high-tech ART rather than as a means of fulfilling the wishes of commissioning couples from all strata. We argue therefore that this draft is reflective of the dominant ideological push that thrives on the inequities of the social system. For the draft to be reworked in a way that does not compromise the interests of the majority of Indians, it requires an alternate ideological push from within its makers or pressure from civil society.
The draft ART Regulation Bill 2008 was critiqued by women activists (19) for its weaknesses, for not locating ART within the priorities of public health, and for using the suffering of infertile couples in India to expand surrogacy markets for international clients without addressing social and medical causes of infertility and its solution (7). But there was no response from the authorities. This strange marriage of high-tech medicine and legislation focused on exclusive tourists and clients, ignoring the need to provide effective and safe technologies with the widest possible coverage to prevent secondary sterility — a primary concern of the majority.
Inevitably, the draft bill does not realise the creative potential of surrogacy which opens new social spaces, such as the concept of ‘family’ for the surrogate child – the family could be more than a pair of parents. It ignores the need for altered definitions and construction of family and parentage and prefers anonymity and secrecy — pretending that nothing unusual is happening. Instead of being celebrated for her act of generosity and humanness, the surrogate is treated by this piece of legislation as a contract worker available for exploitation –both monetarily and psychologically. The value of her gestational motherhood is denied, and weight is given to the commissioning parents as owners of the genetic material. This negation of the potential of a humane relationship between the two mothers and their families that can generate an open environment around surrogacy reflects the fears of a patriarchal society and its inability to address new challenges with a new vision.
The law makers are reluctant to accept that law in societies at the crossroads has to respond to new situations, and not contain and hide change — even if it is the notion of parentage, motherhood, fatherhood, or family itself.
The 18th Law Commission that reviewed this bill had a mixed reaction. It pronounced infertility “a huge impediment in the overall wellbeing of couples” and “a major problem” (1:9), but without basing this statement on any objective assessment. Though prohibition of surrogacy was considered undesirable, it was realised that the complexity of the issues called for a comprehensive legislation. It stated that the draft prepared by the ICMR was full of lacunae and was incomplete, and proposed that, “while all reasonable expenses should be met” (1:25) by the contract, surrogacy must not be commercial. Second, the surrogate should be given life insurance, and financial support for the surrogate baby should be ensured in case of death of the commissioning parents. Third, it involved the husband and the family of the surrogate in the consent process and accepted artificial insemination and, therefore, donation of ova, by surrogate mothers. At the same time, the Law Commission accepted the contention that parentage is determined by genetic relationship. It proclaimed: “the bond of love and affection with a child primarily emanates from biological relationship.” (1:26) The child, according to the commission, should be registered as that of the commissioning parents, as perhaps gestation is not sufficient to generate love and affection. Essentially, then, the commission’s review is only a slightly amended version of the Draft Bill with which it shares a eugenic, patriarchal philosophical base.
PILSARC, in the meantime, has allowed one of its members to go public about its disagreements with the draft bill. Gayatri Sharma claims that the bill was sent to them in 2006 for comments, and they reviewed and put in their bit in 2006. There have been many changes since then and the present Bill is different from the 2006 version according to Sharma. It is “conservative … reinforces heterosexual and patriarchal assumptions” (20). There are, however, two problems with this dissent. Firstly, it bravely points out that though there is a criticism that surrogacy has been commercialised, “PILSARC and the Draft Bill are silent on commercial surrogacy.” (20). As we have argued, it is their silence on ill-defined compensation and medical coverage that lends a hand in transforming surrogacy into a commercial contract. Second, the full PILSARC team might not have been a party to the outcome of the drafting committee but three of its members were.
After being on the ICMR and the health ministry’s website for some time, the Draft has now resurfaced. One hopes that in its new avatar, a preamble will make its perspective explicit. The lawmakers have the onerous task of retaining collective respect for life, equality, justice and humanness that must guide all sciences and legislation. Such a task calls for political conviction and strong ethical moorings, as yet feeble in the Draft. It needs to address the issues highlighted above, and not just provide for the right to access ART services in the market without ensuring responsive primary healthcare services by the state.