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Kathmandu: Nepal's top court has ordered a halt to commercial surrogacy services in the Himalayan nation until it rules on the legality of the practice, an official said on Wednesday.
Nepal has become a destination for foreigners seeking to have children through surrogate mothers. The practice is controversial, with critics saying it exploits the poverty of women.
Although Nepal has no laws on its books covering surrogacy, the government last year allowed foreign women to serve as surrogates in Nepal but barred local women.
"There are no laws regarding surrogacy it raises many constitutional and legal questions," said Nahakul Subedi, spokesman for the Supreme Court.
"So the court issued a stay order on surrogacy services until the case is settled," Subedi said. Advocate Prabin Pandak, who filed the original lawsuit against the practice, said that the the court's order would put a stop to the registration of new cases.
"Women should not be a subject of trade, neither should a child," Pandak said. "Nepali women are not allowed to be surrogate mothers but they are misrepresented as Indian and used for surrogacy," she said.
Nepal has become an attractive destination for couples who find its services cheaper than those offered by surrogacy agencies in the west. Israel in April airlifted 25 infants born to Indian surrogate mothers in Kathmandu after Nepal was hit by a devastating quake that killed nearly 9,000 people.
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