Feminism: chat
BBC article on Ukraine surrogacy
CarbonelCat · 22/03/2022 09:20
So. Many. Things. To. Say
www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-60824936
CarbonelCat · 22/03/2022 09:27
"Surrogacy is not permitted in Moldova. If the baby is born there, Svetlana will be its legal guardian. She could place it for adoption but then it could be years before Emma and Alex are allowed to take their child home.
So together they have come up with a plan for Svetlana to deliver the baby in a city close to the border.
Svetlana has mixed feelings about going back to Ukraine. "There's shooting everywhere, homes are being reduced to rubble and the Russians are shelling maternity hospitals, kindergartens and schools," she says."
CarbonelCat · 22/03/2022 09:29
"She gave birth to two healthy boys.
A week later she left the hospital. Kharkiv was still under attack and the foreign parents couldn't get there to collect the twins.
So, together with some staff from her agency, Nastya, her two sons and the new-born twins travelled across Ukraine. She cared for the babies while delivering them to their parents at the border. That was more than a week ago, and she hasn't heard from them since."
Aroundtheworldin80moves · 22/03/2022 10:19
I hated how that article made the intended parents look like heros for rescuing the surrogate mothers, while brushing over the issues such as them leaving part of the family behind, living tiny rented apartments without beds, and just popping back to a war zone to make the legalities easier.
Not to mention the babies in the nursery
CarbonelCat · 22/03/2022 11:19
The article is a Mish mash with no coherent point
The last paragraph is v odd.
Detailing how women are being asked/coerced into returning to a war zone to give birth in unsafe circumstances to make the legal issues go away...
Detailing how a woman who had given birth in a war zone to twins then had to travel with the twins and her own 2 small children to hand the babies over to the commissioners who couldn't/wouldn't travel themselves. And that those commissioners have not been in touch since, completely disregarding the surrogate mother and her children's safety and emotional needs.
All v discomforting
FingonTheValiant · 22/03/2022 15:15
I particularly hated the bit where Emma says something like «If you’d asked me a year ago, I’d have said I’d never ask a woman to return to a war zone to give birth to a child, but things have changed». I was absolutely gobsmacked that anyone can have such a lack of awareness that she could say that without adding «but it turns out I’m a selfish and over-privileged with no regard for a pregnant woman’s safety». FFS. What kind of person does that? At the absolute worst, get on a plane and accompany her to another country. But maybe reflect on the reality of what you’re doing. How anyone can read that article and still support surrogacy I don’t know.
Clymene · 22/03/2022 15:19
@FingonTheValiant
...Because I will stop at nothing to get my baby.
I was thinking about all the ones who are trapped. Their 'intended parents' aren't going to want them are they? Because they won't be all shiny and new, they'll be institutionalised and traumatised.
I really hope this is the end of the global baby trade.
empties · 22/03/2022 15:24
In Ireland this was the lead story re the war in Ukraine in the weeks before and beginning. Prominent on the news and Senator cheerleading for Irish parents "expecting" babies in Ukraine.
Given we are just coming to terms with "forced" adoption here it is gobsmacking the lack of awareness around the issues involved.
Not to judge the people who want children but it is seen as an issue with one side only, rather than one where Ukraine is one of the few where this kind of surrogacy is available...
GahAndTheBear · 22/03/2022 15:24
I do think that being open that we are talking about the acceptable face of human trafficking here (it is the global baby trade) would be a good start.
Surrogacy - and especially this kind of international surrogacy - is a euphemism for a system that commodifies and exploits vulnerable women and the infants they are used to grow.
drspouse · 22/03/2022 15:31
I was thinking about all the ones who are trapped. Their 'intended parents' aren't going to want them are they?
I think this happened already at the start of the pandemic, didn't it? The IPs didn't want them because they were too old, having been cared for by their actual mothers (in some cases I would imagine their genetic mothers too), as "nannies".
GahAndTheBear · 22/03/2022 15:33
@drspouse
I think this happened already at the start of the pandemic, didn't it? The IPs didn't want them because they were too old, having been cared for by their actual mothers (in some cases I would imagine their genetic mothers too), as "nannies".
Eurgh. It makes it hard to believe that it’s not just about buying a nice shiny newborn, doesn’t it?
drspouse · 22/03/2022 15:38
Various articles from 2020:
www.marieclaire.com/health-fitness/a32433196/surrogacy-covid-19-ukraine/
www.dw.com/en/coronavirus-babies-born-to-surrogates-stranded-in-ukraine-clinic/a-53547276
www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/the-stranded-babies-of-the-coronavirus-disaster
www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-52706228
If the mothers are being told not to travel because they can't give birth in other countries, this is going to happen again. Only this time it's going to be in a bomb shelter not a hotel.
drspouse · 22/03/2022 15:40
It makes it hard to believe that it’s not just about buying a nice shiny newborn, doesn’t it?
Except of course that's what it is.
Full disclosure: we are adoptive parents and waited months for our DD to be legally released; she was in foster care during this time, and was a baby, and we were lucky enough to see her during this time, but obviously we were not going to go away and say "oh, she's too old now".
Clymene · 22/03/2022 20:20
@drspouse
Except of course that's what it is.
Full disclosure: we are adoptive parents and waited months for our DD to be legally released; she was in foster care during this time, and was a baby, and we were lucky enough to see her during this time, but obviously we were not going to go away and say "oh, she's too old now".
And that's why adoption is light years away from surrogacy. It's not about wanting a box fresh baby which is what this lot want.
I wonder how many babies will be abandoned now? It's like Romania past two
The babies in the article I read aren't being cared for by their mothers. They're being cared for by nurses and nannies in a mass nursery. How is this devastated country going to support all these abandoned orphans?
Whatinthelord · 23/03/2022 01:29
Honestly I’m so cynical about surrogacy, especially paid surrogacy involving foreign poor surrogate mothers.
Honestly this article frustrated me. A decent journalist could have gone in depth about the ethical issue etc. This was an awfully written argument with no mention of the wider issues of surrogacy and little focus on the child.
GahAndTheBear · 23/03/2022 07:49
@Whatinthelord
Honestly this article frustrated me. A decent journalist could have gone in depth about the ethical issue etc. This was an awfully written argument with no mention of the wider issues of surrogacy and little focus on the child.
It so often is. No one wants to touch the ethics of it. Or anything else that might crack the pretence that buying a baby from abroad is somehow a positive thing because the people doing it ‘just desperately want a family’.
CarbonelCat · 23/03/2022 07:54
"Surrogacy is never anyone's first pick but it comes as a result of a deep loss beforehand," she says."
A) this isn't true. There are multiple examples and the push to normalise and celebrate surrogacy increasingly supports surrogacy as an equal and valid choice as a route to having children.
B) of it is isn't/wasn't your first choice, what were the reasons? What about those reasons changes? How do you justify the re weighting of the pros and cons?
Saisong · 23/03/2022 08:02
This is devastating. Those poor mothers and their babies.
The point about how the country will care for the abandoned ones reminds me that there was a news item very recently about children's homes being evacuated. They mentioned hundreds of thousands of children in state care in Ukraine. I don't know why that is already the case, but it points to an already significant 'issue' with abandoned/orphaned children in the country.
Whatinthelord · 23/03/2022 08:33
@CarbonelCat
A) this isn't true. There are multiple examples and the push to normalise and celebrate surrogacy increasingly supports surrogacy as an equal and valid choice as a route to having children.
B) of it is isn't/wasn't your first choice, what were the reasons? What about those reasons changes? How do you justify the re weighting of the pros and cons?
I hated that comment.
As if the fact that surrogacy sometimes comes after a loss (presumably they’re referring to loss of own children/fertility) justifies the use of people in that way. Being unable to have a child doesn’t mean your use of other peoples bodies and unethical systems is ok.
What also saddened me was the comments people made on the article. Lots of “poor babies and parents” but very little recognition that this is a man made problem.
Those babies and surrogate mothers are in that position because of rich foreigners taking advantage of Ukraine’s poor women and weak legislation.
CarbonelCat · 23/03/2022 09:40
Those babies and surrogate mothers are in that position because of rich foreigners taking advantage of Ukraine’s poor women and weak legislation.
Yes. That the agency is expecting to be caring for upwards of 100 babies in a bombed out basement ....it's just horrifying.
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