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Surrogacy law: SC questioned purpose of previous rules
The Centre, represented by Additional Solicitor General Aishwarya Bhati, has said last month that the government was reconsidering the amendment brought in surrogacy law last year.
The Union Health Ministry amended the earlier rules that stated that couples undergoing surrogacy must have both gametes from the intending couple.
"The very purpose of surrogacy would get defeated by such rules," an apex court bench had observed in December last year while permitting more than two dozen petitioners to use the donor eggs to become mothers through surrogacy.
In January, the Supreme Court had asked the Centre why it was not taking a decision despite many women rushing to the top court with grievances
The Centre, represented by Additional Solicitor General Aishwarya Bhati, has said last month that the government was reconsidering the amendment brought in surrogacy law last year.
Several pleas were filed in the top court following the amendment made in Rule 7 on surrogacy on March 14, 2023.
The Rule 7 talks about the 'Consent of the Surrogate Mother and Agreement for Surrogacy' and deals about fertilisation of donor oocytes by the sperm of the husband.
The court had permitted several women petitioners to get donor eggs and go ahead with the surrogacy despite the impugned rule prohibiting it.
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