Georgia Aims To Ban Booming Surrogacy Business For Foreigners

Georgia's government wants to put to bed a booming business in international surrogacy.

For more than two decades, the post-Soviet Caucasus nation has been on a short list of countries that allows both "altruistic" and consumer surrogacy, including for foreign biological parents, at costs that are a fraction of those in wealthier places.

But Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Gharibashvili announced on June 12 that a draft law is in the works to more tightly regulate surrogacy, when a woman carries and gives birth to a baby with no genetic relation, and in vitro fertilization (IVF). He warned of the fertility sector's "direct-order" character, the offer of a "so-called 'sophisticated business'" to "our" Georgian women, and a risk that such children might be destined for same-sex parents abroad.

"There is information that same-sex couples may take the children born here, and there can be a lot of problems," Gharibashvili said, without elaborating.

The Health, Labor, and Social Affairs Ministry's current text for the draft law would exclude commercial surrogacy by limiting the practice to the "principle of altruism only," and would bar Georgian women from carrying and delivering babies for foreign biological parents after 2023.

Representatives of surrogacy and egg-donation agencies operating in Georgia expressed "shock" at Gharibashvili's plan, although they knew the ministry had been working on draft legislation concerning the sector for over a year. They also questioned the prime minister's stated rationale for the foreign ban, saying safeguards are already in place to limit Georgian surrogacy to male-and-female parents.

"I don't know where [Gharibashvili] got his information from," Natia Janadze, head of the international department at the private ReproART clinic and general manager of IVF Tours Georgia, told RFE/RL's Georgian Service. "The issue of the adoption of a child by a same-sex couple is definitely not on the agenda, and it certainly can't be the reason for banning the provision of services to foreign couples."

The current Culture, Sports, and Youth Minister Thea Tsulukiani ordered an amendment to Georgian law in 2020 that tightened the approval processes for IVF births. At the time, Tsulukiani said the move was intended to further limit the process to "a man and a woman" and to "prevent the transnational crime of baby trafficking" and prevent surrogacy in Georgia from falling prey to "sexual exploitation, torture, inhumane treatment" and "to prevent fictitious couples who create a child through surrogacy for criminal purposes" from taking them abroad. She said companies "make millions" through what she described as a form of "organized crime."

Analysts have pointed to a rise in the influence and visibility of activism linked to the ultraconservative Georgian Orthodox Church, which has challenged LGBT rights and perceived affronts to traditional family values on religious grounds. In some cases, the church's teachings have tracked closely with government talking points.

Janadze's agency has coordinated around 1,000 surrogacy births since 2014, and she acknowledged that strict regulation is in the interest of both the ministry and the industry. But she expected changes to the law to mostly align Georgian legislation with corresponding laws elsewhere and didn't foresee the foreigner ban.

"We were expecting that the draft law would be ready by fall, but unfortunately this sudden departure shocked us," Janadze said the day after Gharibashvili's statement. "We are still waiting for something else, and we continue to face a different reality."

Foreign Clients

Janadze has estimated that around 95 percent of her clients are foreigners, including from Israel, China, the United States, Turkey, Azerbaijan, Canada, Australia, Greece, Spain, or India.

Same-sex couples are already strictly prevented by law from taking children born to Georgian surrogates out of the country, she said, since the process is limited to married or cohabitating male-female couples, with notarization requirements to prove it.

Health, Labor, and Social Affairs Minister Zurab Azarashvili has insisted that the "principle of altruism" be regulated under the law, but the ministry has mostly been silent on how it should be defined. Azarashvili also acknowledged a demographic component in the debate, citing laws on surrogacy and IVF as "opportunities" to address a declining population in a country of under 4 million.

Janadze cited questions about how the proposed introduction of a "selfless principle" will affect surrogate mothers' fees if the draft law is adopted in its current form.

Surrogates should receive "logical" compensation for their time and work, she said, "but because the demand for surrogate mothers will decline because of the ban on such services for foreign couples, at their expense, I can tell you that the amount of compensation will decline."

Surrogates generally earn between $17,000 and $23,000 for carrying a fetus to term, slightly more for twins, according to industry experts. They say the vast majority of women who enter into such contracts are struggling financially.

Worldwide Differences On Surrogacy

Ever since the success in 1985 in the United States of the world's first gestational surrogacy, only a small group of countries have legalized commercial surrogacy. Many countries have made all forms of surrogacy illegal, while others allow noncommercial surrogacy under certain circumstances or have avoided legislating the issue.

Georgia's first successful gestational surrogacy was completed in 2007, a decade after it became one of the first countries in the world to pass laws permitting third-party reproduction. So far, it has allowed both commercial and so-called altruistic surrogacy, in which the surrogate receives care and related expenses but no further payment.

The numbers of babies born to surrogate mothers in Georgia and then taken abroad is not known. Georgia's Justice Ministry has previously referred RFE/RL questions about the issue to the Interior Ministry, which said it doesn't compile statistics on border crossings "of children born through surrogacy in Georgia."

'We Take This Step Because Things Are Difficult For Us'

For some women planning to be surrogates, the draft law is a worrying development.

"Who will agree to be a surrogate mother if we no longer get more or less adequate remuneration?" said Maya, a 31-year-old woman with two young children of her own. "We take this step because things are difficult for us."

She said her husband is gone and she works multiple jobs but is practically penniless after paying rent. Her first effort at surrogacy was supposed to earn her around $18,000 but ended prematurely.

She plans to try again. However, she said, now she'll wait until at least January 2024 because it's unclear to her what the ministry's idea of remuneration based on the "principle of altruism" will be.

"A lot depends on the amount that I should receive as a result of surrogacy," she said. "The welfare of my children comes first. It would be nice to live in a country where women agreed to surrogacy only for charitable purposes, but unfortunately we don't live in such a country."

Georgia has seen relatively strong economic growth for much of the past decade, aside from a lean year following the outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic.

Tbilisi accelerated its bid for EU membership shortly after Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. But its official candidacy has been complicated by the bloc's concerns at perceived backsliding on democracy and the rule of law, as well as the ruling Georgian Dream party's reluctance to join Western sanctions against Russia.

Two years ago, 30-year-old Eka earned $20,000 as a surrogate for biological parents from China. A mother of three, she wants to do it again, in hopes of buying an apartment. She told RFE/RL that "you can't earn that kind of money by working as a consultant, or by working in a beauty salon, or doing cleaning." She also said she's heard the guidelines for paid surrogacy are going to be changing.

"Around me, women agree to surrogacy only because they need money," she said. "Otherwise, who's happy to be pregnant for nine months when you already have three or four children of your own?"

Expectant Parents

There are similar questions coming from the other side of the surrogacy equation, too: the people hoping to become parents.

Speculation has been rife on social media that once foreigners are denied the service in Georgia, the cost of paying someone to carry and deliver a baby will fall. But that could be overly optimistic.

The Indian government's decision to pull the plug in 2015 on a nearly $400 million-a-year commercial surrogacy trade frequently used by foreigners was blamed for "killing" the domestic surrogate market completely.

In Georgia, 35-year-old Salome learned about six months ago that a health issue prevents her from maintaining a pregnancy. After seeing several specialists, she said, her doctor recommended that she try a surrogate.

"He was surprised" that she was receptive to the idea, she said. "We don't even offer Georgian couples to have a child this way because they actually don't have the financial means to do so."

Her husband has Swedish citizenship, though, and Salome said they're now worried they will be ineligible for surrogacy services under any new legislation. And even if they were permitted to have a child through surrogacy in Georgia, she wondered, could they take that child outside the country?

Salome is already undergoing medical treatment to provide an embryo for another woman to carry to term, she said.

"We were planning that the embryo would be implanted and a child would be born with the help of a surrogate mother in 2024," she said. "Now, it turns out that we need to hurry and quickly find a surrogate mother so that the surrogacy can take place before the beginning of January 2024."

She noted that surrogacy is banned in Scandinavian countries, including Sweden.

"So, since we had the opportunity for it in Georgia, we wanted to use this option. But now we don't know what will happen or how it will be."

Source: Radio Free / Europe Radio Liberty

Kars home to Türkiye’s first cheese museum

Cheese has thousands of unique varieties worldwide. A museum in Türkiye’s Kars now showcases the region’s famous cheeses, many of which are still produced using traditional methods. Asli Atbas reports from Kars.

Source: TRTworld.com

Afghans Seeking Refuge In Russia Face Higher Hurdles

In February 2020, Afghan citizen Ali Mahdi Hussein arrived in the southern Russian resort town of Mineralniye Vody, known for its health spas, at the invitation of a relative.

During his stay, the militant Taliban continued its territorial advances against government forces at home. Before he was due to depart for home, Hussein requested – and received – temporary asylum in Russia.

When he sought to extend his asylum at the end of 2022, more than a year after the Taliban toppled the Western-backed government and imposed its repressive form of authority over Afghanistan, he was in for an unpleasant surprise.

The branch of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in the Stavropol region, where Mineralniye Vody is located, turned him down. Afghan law under the Taliban provides for the protection of core civil rights, it said.

Furthermore, it claimed Hussein was not in a high-risk group category.

Hussein’s case was not an exception, advocates for Afghans in Russia say. They say that Russian authorities, especially in its southern regions, have been turning down a greater number of Afghan requests for temporary asylum, despite the dire political and economic situation in the Asian nation.

"The Ministry of Internal Affairs usually extended the permission to stay in Russia – first for three months, then for a year, and so on. There was practically no need to go to court [to appeal] because there were few refusals,” said Ebadulla Masumi, the head of an Afghan community group in Stavropol.

But that trend has now rotated 180 degrees -- and it’s unclear why, Masumi said.

“In 2023, they began to deny everyone [asylum extensions] without explanation. There has not been a single positive decision during this time. I don't know what has changed – the law or the policy of the state," he said.

Moscow doesn’t publish the number of rejected asylum cases, but does publish those approved. From 2007 to 2011, Russia gave temporary asylum to more than 1,000 Afghans per year on average, more than to refugees from any other country. Temporary asylum is granted for one year and can be extended if the political situation in the home country does not change.

From 2020 to 2022, amid restricted travel due to the COVID pandemic, Russia granted on average only 600 requests for temporary political asylum to Afghans.

The suspected increase in Afghan asylum rejections comes amid growing repression by the Russian state, which has clamped down harder than ever on all forms of dissent following its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

That war has also triggered a large influx of Ukrainians to southern Russia, thousands of whom have applied for asylum.

Russian authorities may be rejecting Afghan asylum seekers amid concern they will seek monetary assistance, Andrei Serenko, the head of the Center for the Study of Afghan Politics, told RFE/RL.

He said Russian authorities are using the resources set aside for such issues on Ukrainians. Russia granted nearly 9,000 Ukrainians and 732 Afghans temporary asylum in 2022, government data shows.

"You can say they were just unlucky -- they got here at the wrong time,” Serenko said of the Afghan refugees who have been seeking asylum recently.

Ali Akbarzadeh, 22, who was turned down for asylum and deported, said Russian authorities showed little interest in Afghan requests for temporary refuge.

"It took a long time and they didn't pay much attention to Afghans and their asylum applications," he told RFE/RL.

Taliban Turbulence

Many Afghan asylum seekers in Russia have said they could face persecution, and even death, if they are sent back to Taliban-controlled Afghanistan. RFE/RL could not verify individual claims.

Some of them worked for the deposed government or had relatives who did. The Taliban has allegedly targeted former members of the government for repression.

Hussein Navid and Habiba Nabizadi arrived in Pyatigorsk, another resort town in the Stavropol region, in September 2022 on a tourist visa with their two young children.

They soon applied for temporary asylum but had their request turned down. Nabizadi had worked for the National Directorate of Security (NDS), the intelligence agency of the former government of Afghanistan, and was a member of a prominent women’s organization.

In their application for asylum, her family said they feared for their lives if they went back, in part due to her previous work.

In many of the asylum rejections, Russian officials contend the Afghan citizens are exaggerating the threats to their lives at home and claim their real motivations for staying are economic.

Information about what has happened to Afghan refugees sent home by foreign countries since the Taliban takeover is hard to come by, but the overall lack of human rights and civil rights protections is well-documented.

Some Afghan refugees who worked with the former Afghan security forces have been detained by the Taliban following their deportation from Iran, but their subsequent fate is unknown.

The Taliban took power in Afghanistan in August 2021 after the United States pulled out its troops, resulting in the near collapse of government forces. The militants allegedly killed dozens of former Afghan officials, security forces, and people who worked with the international military contingent, despite their promise of a general amnesty.

They quickly imposed their strict interpretation of Islamic law, or Shari'a, on citizens, including severe restrictions on women and girls.

Their repressive rule, along with the economic collapse their seizure of power triggered, led to a mass exodus of citizens seeking refuge in neighboring countries and countries farther afield, including Russia.

Like many other countries, Russia officially considers the Taliban a terrorist organization. Nonetheless, Russian officials regularly hold meetings with the militants in Moscow as the Kremlin seeks to project global influence and power and undercut U.S. clout.

President Vladimir Putin announced in October 2021 that Russia would "move" toward excluding the Taliban from his government’s list of terrorist organizations, but Moscow has yet to do so.

Russia is far from alone in rejecting Afghans seeking refuge, and the numbers are much larger in some countries that border Afghanistan. Iran and Pakistan have been deporting large numbers of Afghans. Last week alone, Tehran forced around 20,000 undocumented Afghan refugees and migrants out of the country.

Turkey has also deported thousands of Afghans who have arrived via Iran.

Tajikistan, which shares a long border with Afghanistan, has also forced some of the thousands of Afghan refugees arriving there to return home, but official figures are not available.

Source: Radio Free / Europe Radio Liberty

Turkish Vice President Yilmaz visits Northern Cyprus

Turkish Vice President Cevdet Yilmaz has arrived in Lefkosa, the capital of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC), on his first visit after taking office.

Yilmaz was welcomed at the Ercan Airport on Sunday by TRNC Prime Minister Unal Ustel, Türkiye’s Ambassador to Lefkosa Metin Feyzioglu and other officials.

"We will also have meetings with many of our Ministers, officials, representatives of civil society, and representatives of the business world. In each of these, we will talk about the relations between Türkiye and the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus and what we can do," he said on Sunday.

Yilmaz also expressed good wishes, emphasizing the President's love for the Turkish Cypriot people and the importance he attaches to them referring to the Protocol of Economic and Financial Cooperation between Türkiye and the TRNC as part of the "Century of Türkiye" Cabinet.

New terminal of Ercan Airport

Yilmaz also inspected the construction of the new terminal of Ercan Airport, which stands as the TRNC's gateway to the world.

"The new terminal building will not only be an airport, but also an attraction center for the revival of tourism, employment and investment in Northern Cyprus," Yilmaz said.

The new double-runway Ercan Airport, where aircraft of all types and sizes can land, can also host wide-body aircraft, Yilmaz said.

"As you know, our first runway has been completed and our second runway will be completed as well. This airport will have a length suitable for the use of all models of passenger aircraft," he said.

"I believe that the biggest airport of the island of Cyprus will be put to service for the Turkish Cypriots as soon as possible," he added.

'We will continue to defend the legitimate rights of the TRNC'

Evaluating the developments regarding the recognition of the TRNC on a televised broadcast later in the day, Yilmaz said: "We will intensify our efforts for recognition of the TRNC in the next period. Being an observer member in the Organisation of Turkic States is a sign of this, in a sense. The Turkish Cypriot people in Northern Cyprus can in no way be pushed to a minority status, hierarchically dragged into a position below others. They have to take their place on the island in an equal and sovereign manner."

On the question about the developments in Eastern Mediterranean, Yilmaz said: "The Eastern Mediterranean is an extremely important geography and there is an economic activity here. Different countries also have their own interests. For a while, they made an effort to exclude Türkiye and the TRNC from this equation."

"Most importantly, the agreement with Libya," he said, referring to Türkiye's maritime deal with the North African country in 2019.

"Now a new equation has emerged. We defend the legitimate rights of Türkiye and the TRNC, their rights stemming from international law, to the end, there is no stepping back here."

Source: TRTworld.com

Seismologists warn of ‘hazardous, explosive’ eruption of Philippines’ Mayon volcano

The Philippines national seismology agency said it cannot rule out the possibility of Mayon volcano's "hazardous and explosive" eruption as it continues to spew lava and sulfuric gas.

Dr. Teresito Bacolcol, chief of the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs), said that these activities reflect "what is happening on the vent," local English daily Manila Times reported on Sunday.

At least three volcanic earthquakes and 11 pyroclastic density currents (PDCs), according to Bacolcol, were recorded from 5 a.m. on June 17 to 5 a.m. (local time) on Sunday.

So far, the current parameters are still reflecting on what is happening, the effusive eruption, but the possibility of an explosive eruption is still there, he warned.

'The lava flows have advanced to maximum lengths of 1,500 meters (1.5 kilometers) from the summit crater while collapse debris has deposited to 3,300 meters (3.3 kilometers) from the crater,' the newspaper quoted a report from the Mayon Volcano Network.

Continuous moderate degassing from the summit crater produced steam-laden plumes that rose 100 meters (328 feet), it added.

Phivolc said Alert Level 3 remains, which means that the angry volcano is in a high level of unrest and a hazardous eruption is possible.

Mount Mayon, the picturesque yet most active volcano in the Philippines, began spewing lava last Sunday.

Thousands of people have been relocated to evacuation centers in Albay province in the northeast peninsula of Bicol, over the past week as lava flows and volcanic earthquakes continue.

Volcanologists in the Southeast Asian country raised Mayon to alert level three on a scale of five, signifying a "relatively high level of unrest as magma is at the crater and a warning of the increased possibility of a hazardous eruption within weeks or even days.'

Source: Anadolu Agency

Israel’s Netanyahu to advance judicial overhaul this week

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday his government will move ahead with its plans for a judicial overhaul this week, according to local media.

Speaking at a weekly cabinet meeting, Netanyahu said his government will convene later this week to start 'practical steps' towards implementing the judicial reform plans.

"We will start to advance the judicial reform starting this week,' Netanyahu was quoted as saying by Israeli public broadcaster KAN.

These steps will be taken "responsibly, but in accordance to the mandate we have received,' he added.

His statements came shortly after thousands of Israelis demonstrated on Saturday night for the 24th straight week against government plans for judicial reform.

Israel has been in political turmoil in recent months over the planned judicial reform by the Netanyahu government, which the opposition views as a power grab in favor of executive authority.

Netanyahu, however, insists his plan would enhance democracy and restore the balance among the legislative, executive and judicial branches of government.

In March, Netanyahu, who is on trial for corruption, bowed to pressure and announced a temporary halt to the plans amid protests across the country.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Nearly 100 dead as Indian states swelter in heat

At least 98 people have died in the Indian states of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar in the last three days due to extreme heat, according to officials.

As parts of India have been witnessing severe heatwaves in the last few days with temperatures exceeding 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit) at many places, 54 people died in northern Uttar Pradesh and 44 people in eastern Bihar.

All 54 deaths in Uttar Pradesh were reported from one Ballia district, where at least 400 other people have been admitted to the district hospital for treatment.

Medical Superintendent Dr. SK Yadav, confirming deaths, said a team from the state capital Lucknow will be arriving to investigate the matter.

'They will see whether any other disease is responsible for these deaths. Most of these patients had other accompanying diseases like hypertension and diabetes,' Yadav told Anadolu.

Ballia district recorded a maximum temperature of 43 degree Celsius (109F) on Saturday.

Another 44 people died in the eastern state of Bihar due to hot weather conditions.

Out of 44 deaths, 35 people died in Patna city alone, according to broadcaster India Today. Nine people have died in other districts of the state.

Patna, the capital of Bihar, recorded a maximum temperature of 44.7 degrees Celsius (112F) on Friday. The temperature in the other 11 districts crossed 44 degrees Celsius.

The Indian Meteorological Department (IMD) predicted heatwave conditions in many states in India and issued a red alert for Bihar.

Many states have extended the summer vacation in schools due to the scorching summer.

Last year, a study published by the medical journal The Lancet said that deaths caused due to heat in India increased by 55% between 2000-2004 and 2017-2021.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Pakistan moves against human traffickers as Kashmir mourns victims of Greek shipwreck

The state flag flew half-mast, and special prayers were held across Pakistan-administered Kashmir on Sunday to remember dozens of youths from the region who have been killed or gone missing in a boat wreck off the coast of Greece on Wednesday.

The government announced Sunday as a "mourning day" as grief and sorrow gripped the region following the shocking news which fell like a bombshell on the victims' families back home.

At least 78 migrants drowned off southwestern Greece on Wednesday after the fishing boat they were in capsized.

A total of 104 migrants were rescued, but the number of deaths is feared to rise as survivors said the vessel was carrying more than 600 migrants, mostly from Pakistan, Egypt, and Syria.

Pakistan's Foreign Ministry confirmed that 12 of the survivors are Pakistani nationals.

The scenic Khoe Ratta town of Kotli district remained in the grip of shock as some 27 youths from the area who were on the ill-fated boat have gone missing.

Thousands of people, including local politicians and government officials, thronged the victims' homes to offer condolences to the bereaved families.

Shocked town shut

'The whole town is in deep shock. Shops and markets are closed as special prayers are being held in different parts of the district,' Ameer Mughal, a local resident, told Anadolu over the phone.

Assistant Commissioner Sardar Mushtaq Ahmad told Anadolu that 27 youths belonged to different parts of the district, whereas further data is being collected. The victims' number may soar, he added.

A spectacle played out by local broadcaster Geo News showed a family wailing as people offered condolences. A dejected father broke into tears as another mourner hugged him, another footage showed.

Hundreds of unemployment-stricken Pakistani youths risk their lives to reach Europe by sea and road for a better future after paying huge amounts to human smugglers, despite frequent accidents. Many of them are even shot by border guards.

In March this year, a famous Pakistani woman athlete Shahid Raza, and several others were killed after a boat carrying more than 150 others from Pakistan, Iran, and Afghanistan crashed into the rocks trying to reach the shores in Crotone, Italy.

Action against human traffickers

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Sunday ordered a crackdown against human traffickers across the country.

In a statement issued from his office, Sharif also ordered an inquiry into the fresh incident, besides expressing grief over the loss of "precious" lives.

The government agencies are often accused of forging a nexus with or turning a blind eye to human smuggling.

The federal investigation agency has arrested 10 suspected human traffickers from different parts of the Islamabad-controlled part of Kashmir - also known as Azad Jammu and Kashmir -, and another from Karachi airport, who was trying to flee abroad, Geo News reported.

The Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Mumtaz Zahra Baloch, in a statement, said that Pakistan's Embassy in Greece remains in contact with the Greek authorities to identify the 78 recovered bodies.

'At this stage, we are unable to verify the number and identity of Pakistani nationals among the deceased,' she said, adding that the identification process will take place through DNA-matching with close family members (parents and children only).

Source: Anadolu Agency

Ukraine claims it launched 14 airstrikes on positions of Russian forces

Ukraine on Sunday claimed that it launched 14 airstrikes on areas where Russian forces are concentrated.

The air force carried out 14 airstrikes over the past day, hitting areas where enemy personnel are stationed, Ukraine's General Staff said in a statement on Facebook, adding: 'Our defenders also destroyed 2 anti-aircraft missile systems.'

The statement also claimed that Ukrainian missiles and artillery struck three control points, five ammunition depots, and three artillery units in the past day, adding that Russian forces carried out 43 airstrikes and four missile strikes, in addition to firing a salvo of 51 rockets.

Russia is concentrating its war efforts in the directions of Lyman, Bakhmut, Avdiivka, and Marinka, where it claimed that 26 clashes took place during the day, it noted.

According to the statement, operational situation in the Volyn and Polesia has not changed significantly, while Russian forces continue to conduct defensive operations in the directions of Zaporizhzhia and Kherson.

Russian forces are deserting in Luhansk, it added.

Russian authorities have not yet commented on the claims, and independent confirmation is difficult due to the ongoing war.

On June 10, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy declared that the Ukrainian army is taking "appropriate counteroffensive and defensive actions" against Russia on the front line.

Source: Anadolu Agency