Taking the baby home
According to a lawyer who provides legal services for parents seeking a Thai surrogate, there are two ways for parents to legally take babies home. The first option is for the intended parents to adopt the child. This is unpopular because the procedure can take between six months and two years. The sand offer the name of the intended father to register the baby's birth certificate. Since the registering of a birth certificate does not require the parents to be present, surrogacy clinics or brokerage staff can easily complete the process. Afterwards, agencies will apply for a Thai passport for the child and then the intended parents can obtain visas for the baby from their embassies in Thailand. Each embassy has different conditions; some require DNA tests and some do not. Some European embassies will not grant a visa for a surrogate child as surrogacy is forbidden there. In addition, since there is no law to regulate surrogacy in Thailand, taking the Thai baby out the country could be construed as human trafficking. Responding to the legal complication, the Israeli government has instructed Israeli homosexual couples to avoid surrogacy procedures in Thailand, and warned that as of Nov 30, 2014, the government would no longer provide assistance to parents of babies born in this country.
Taking the baby home
According to a lawyer who provides legal services for parents seeking a Thai surrogate, there are two ways for parents to legally take babies home. The first option is for the intended parents to adopt the child. This is unpopular because the procedure can take between six months and two years. The sand offer the name of the intended father to register the baby's birth certificate. Since the registering of a birth certificate does not require the parents to be present, surrogacy clinics or brokerage staff can easily complete the process. Afterwards, agencies will apply for a Thai passport for the child and then the intended parents can obtain visas for the baby from their embassies in Thailand. Each embassy has different conditions; some require DNA tests and some do not. Some European embassies will not grant a visa for a surrogate child as surrogacy is forbidden there. In addition, since there is no law to regulate surrogacy in Thailand, taking the Thai baby out the country could be construed as human trafficking. Responding to the legal complication, the Israeli government has instructed Israeli homosexual couples to avoid surrogacy procedures in Thailand, and warned that as of Nov 30, 2014, the government would no longer provide assistance to parents of babies born in this country.
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