The Weekend Australian recently featured on its front page a story about the journey Canberra couple Emma and Alex Micallef have undergone to commission a baby in Ukraine. It detailed the obstacles they have experienced along the way, including the logistics of managing such an arrangement in the midst of the country’s ongoing invasion at the hands of Russia (“Miracle of life delivered in a war-torn land far away”).
However, what is interesting to note about the story (and not mentioned in the newspaper article) is that entering into an overseas commercial surrogacy arrangement is illegal in the Australian Capital Territory, the jurisdiction where the couple currently reside. According to the Australian government’s smart traveller website:
“It is illegal for residents of the ACT, NSW and QLD to enter into commercial surrogacy arrangements overseas. Doing so could lead to arrest and jail in Australia.”
The process as described in the news article indicates that the Micallefs, with the assistance of non-profit organisation Growing Families, have entered into a commercial surrogacy arrangement overseas:
“The commercialisation of the process – very different from the altruistic approach in Australia – meant the baby would be legally the Micallefs’ from birth and they would not have to go through bureaucratic processes to adopt their daughter. There is no court decree, no adoption procedure, and the gestational mother, who is paid about €15,000 to €20,000 ($22,200 to $29,640), which is many times the Ukrainian minimum wage, has no legal right.”