Sydney Morning Herald – “Indian IVF bill may stop gay couple surrogacy” by Matt Wade and Conrad Walters

If the parents of newborn Noah Allen-Drury are lucky, their son will sleep through the noise as their flight from India lands in Sydney this morning.
Noah’s gay parents, however, are aware of legal turbulence that could prohibit the surrogacy arrangements that fulfilled their wish for a child.
A growing number of male couples from Australia and other Western countries are hiring surrogates in India to bear children, but that might no longer be possible if a draft bill to regulate IVF in India becomes law.
R.S. Sharma, the secretary of the committee writing a bill to govern assisted reproductive technology (ART), told the Heraldthat unless gay and lesbian relationships are legalised in India, gay couples would be excluded from hiring surrogates.
Delhi’s High Court recently overturned a 150-year-old section of the country’s penal code that outlawed ”carnal intercourse against the order of nature”.
However, gay activists warn this ruling, which in effect decriminalised sodomy, does not legalise gay relationships, leaving the status of such relationships unclear.
"If our government does not permit gay relationships, then it certainly will not be permitted for foreign gay couples to come to this country and have a [surrogacy] agreement," said Dr Sharma, who is the deputy director-general of the reproductive health and nutrition division at the India Council of Medical Research.

When: Saturday 22 May 2010 from 10.00 A.M. TO 1:00 P.M.