After an Australian couple reportedly refused to care for a boy born with Down Syndrome, his Thai surrogate mother vowed Monday to "never abandon" him.
AFP reported that Pattaramon Chanbua and seven-month old Gammy have been at the center of a surrogacy controversy after reports emerged that the Australian couple flew to Thailand and took the boy's healthy twin sister at birth, but rejected the disabled child.
The 21-year-old surrogate said she would raise Gammy, who has been in hospital with a lung infection and heart condition for the last few days.
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"From all of these unlucky things I am glad that we are together. I love him very much, I will never abandon him," Pattaramon told AFP at Gammy's bedside in Chonburi province.
"I never thought of having an abortion, I never thought to abandon him. I love him as my own baby... he is my baby. I love him very much," she said.
"Gammy is getting better step-by-step," she said, adding the $215,000 donated so far by well-wishers across the globe would go towards his treatment and school fees.
The case has also sparked fevered debate on the moral and legal grounding of international surrogacy, with Australians who travel overseas to side-step domestic restrictions falling under the spotlight.
Australia's immigration minister on Monday praised Pattaramon for taking on the disabled baby despite already having two young children of her own.
"It is terrible, just absolutely horrible and heartbreaking," Scott Morrison said of the case.
"But I have got to tell you who is an absolute hero in all of this and that is the Thai mother. She is a saint," he said.
"Sure there are lots of Australians who are desperate to be parents, but that can never I think sanction what we have just seen here."
The full picture is unclear after the surrogate and the Australian parents gave apparently competing versions of events.
Pattaramon said she agreed to carry another Thai donor's egg fertilized by the Australian man in exchange for around $14,900.
An agency, which she refused to name for legal reasons, acted as the go-between with the Australians.
She said the agency told her the parents wanted her to have an abortion once medical tests revealed the boy had Down Syndrome, but she refused.
Abortion is illegal in Thailand – except in very specific cases including rape and to protect the mother's health – and it also runs counter to beliefs in the overwhelmingly Buddhist kingdom.
"The agent said the couple would pay for an abortion... but we are in a Buddhist country, they don't understand – if I had an abortion I would be arrested as it is like killing a person," she said, adding the fallout since Gammy's birth has battered her trust in both the agency and the Australian couple.
The surrogate told AFP that the Australian parents met both babies, who were lying side-by-side in the hospital soon after she gave birth.
But the parents have denied any knowledge of Gammy, according to a report by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, which said it had spoken to them at their home south of Perth.
The parents said situation at the Thai hospital was "very confusing" because of the language barrier, the report added.
Commercial surrogacy, in which a woman is paid to carry a child, is not permitted in Australia but couples are able to use an altruistic surrogate who receives no payment beyond medical and other reasonable expenses.
To avoid those curbs, Surrogacy Australia said couples are increasingly choosing to find women willing to carry their baby overseas, with several hundred each year travelling to India, Thailand and the United States.
Thai health authorities say it is also illegal to pay for surrogacy in the kingdom and someone who agrees to carry a baby must be related to the intended parents.
While the case added fuel to the highly-emotive debate on surrogacy in Australia and beyond, it has also stirred an outpouring of sympathy for Gammy and Pattaramon.
The "Hope for Gammy" fundraising page has already topped its $200,000 target from thousands of donors.
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