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Pregnant Filipinos arrested in Cambodia for surrogacy

Staff WritersAP
Thirteen pregnant Filipino women accused of acting as surrogate mothers in Cambodia might face jail. (EPA PHOTO)
Camera IconThirteen pregnant Filipino women accused of acting as surrogate mothers in Cambodia might face jail. (EPA PHOTO) Credit: AAP

Thirteen pregnant Filipino women accused of illegally acting as surrogate mothers in Cambodia, after being recruited online, could face jail after they give birth, a senior official says.

Interior Ministry Secretary of State Chou Bun Eng, who leads the country's fight against human trafficking and sexual exploitation, said police found 24 foreign women, 20 Philippine and four Vietnamese, when they raided a villa in Kandal province, near the capital of Phnom Penh, on September 23.

Thirteen of the Filipino women were found to be pregnant and were charged in court on October 1 under a provision in the law on suppression of human trafficking and sexual exploitation, she said.

The law was updated in 2016 to ban commercial surrogacy after Cambodia became a popular destination for foreigners seeking women to give birth to their children.

Developing countries have been popular for surrogacy because costs are much lower than in countries such as the United States and Australia, where surrogate services could cost around $150,000.

The surrogacy business boomed in Cambodia after it was put under tight restrictions in neighbouring Thailand, as well as in India and Nepal.

In July 2017, a Cambodian court sentenced an Australian woman and two Cambodian associates to 1.5 years in prison for providing commercial surrogacy services.

The new case is unusual because surrogates normally are employed in their own countries, not transported elsewhere.

Cambodia already has a bad reputation for human trafficking, especially in connection with online scams in which foreigners recruited for work under false pretenses are kept in conditions of virtual slavery and help perpetrate criminal fraud online against targets in many countries.

Details of the new surrogacy case remain murky.

Chou Bun Eng told The Associated Press that the business that recruited the surrogates was based in Thailand, and their food and accommodation in Cambodia were arranged from there. She said the authorities had not yet identified the business.

She said the seven Filipino women and four Vietnamese women who were caught in the raid but who were not pregnant would be deported soon.

The 13 pregnant women have been placed under care at a hospital in Phnom Penh, said Chou Bun Eng. She added that after they give birth, they could be prosecuted on charges that could land them in prison for two to five years.

She said that Cambodia considered the women not to have been victimised but rather offenders who conspired with the organisers to act as surrogates and then sell the babies for money.

Her assertion could not be verified, as the women could not be contacted and it is not known if they have lawyers.

The Philippines Embassy in Cambodia, in response to a local press account of the affair, issued a statement on Wednesday confirming most of the details related to what it called the "rescue of 20 Filipino women."

"The Philippine Embassy ensured that all 20 Filipinos were interviewed in the presence of an Embassy representative and an interpreter in every step of the investigation process," it said.

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