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Supreme Court directs CARA to consider German couple's plea for adoption

The Supreme Court today directed the Central Adoption Resource Agency to consider as a one-time measure the plea of a German couple for adoption of twins born through a surrogate Indian mother.

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The Supreme Court today directed the Central Adoption Resource Agency (CARA) to consider as a one-time measure the plea of a German couple for adoption of twins born through a surrogate Indian mother.
     
A bench of justices GS Singhvi and Asok Kumar Ganguly granted four weeks to the agency to explore the possibility to help the German couple John Balaz and his wife on humanitarian grounds.

The apex court passed the direction after the couple told the Bench that they were willing to go for an inter-country adoption as surrogacy is a punishable offence in their country.
   
The court had earlier on February 25 asked the CARA of Union Women and Child Welfare Ministry to consider grant of adoption rights as a 'special case' to the German couple.

The court had passed the direction after the counsel for the union government told the bench that under the existing rules, the German couple cannot be granted adoption rights as such a privilege is available only if the children are abandoned by the biological parents.

In the present case, the government said the children were born through a surrogate mother and there was no provision under the law for inter-country adoption for children. It however, offered to examine the plea for adoption of the German couple as a special case provided it was not treated as a precedent.

The court, in its earlier direction, had asked the government to examine the offer of the German couple to go for adoption of the kids as surrogacy is a punishable offence in Germany which was not willing to grant the surrogate children any citizenship or visa.

The Centre had earlier rejected the couple's plea for grant of citizenship to the children on the ground that the statute does not provide citizenship rights to kids born of a surrogate woman.
   
The German couple had sought Indian citizenship for the children born in February 2008 through surrogate mother Martha
Immanual Khristy on the plea that the twins otherwise would not be allowed entry into Germany which does not recognise surrogacy.

The couple claim that once the twins are accorded Indian citizenship they would be entitled to passports, thus facilitating their entry into Germany. After the passport authorities turned down their plea, the couple moved the Gujarat high court.

The high court had on November 11 directed the Centre to grant citizenship by taking the view that since the twins were born to a surrogate Indian mother they were entitled to the country's citizenship.

Aggrieved, the Centre filed an appeal in the apex court.
    
The Centre had taken the stand that under the Citizenship Act, 1955, since the commissioning parents were a German couple, the two children cannot be treated as Indian citizens and hence there was no question of granting them passports.

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