Update:
Great news.
Adam and Kate Osborne, the Australians who have been stuck in Thailand with their baby daughters after Thau authorities cracked down on surrogacy laws, have finally arrived home.
The couple arrived at Port Macquarie airport at 10am yesterday clutching newborn babies Sierra-Leone and Mali, the Daily Telegraph reports.
The young parents looked pleased to present their babies to some of the extended family for the first time.
“It’s hard to describe the feeling, I was just overwhelmed,” said grandmother Barbara Osborne, the Daily Telegraph reports. “It was just relief to see them and know that they’d come home safe.”
Previously, Mamamia wrote…
Thai authorities have said they will exercise leniency around recent international surrogacy cases.
Thailand has indicated it will fast-track court-clearance processes that, as previously reported, would take around 6 months and cost up to $50,000.
News.com.au reports an estimated 10 Australian families with 14 children are currently awaiting clearance to leave the country after a recent crackdown on commercial surrogacy laws in Thailand.
But Thailand’s new Prime Minister and Army Chief General Prayuth Chan-ocha says they will consider speeding up the court clearance process on a case-by-case basis.
“We are concerned that Thai women who are already surrogates will not dare to consult doctors at hospitals while they are pregnant because they are afraid that they would be prosecuted,” he said in a televised address on Friday. “The clinics that hired them or asked them to do it have been closed, so it is dangerous for the babies.”