The Cabinet has given the go-ahead for the
drafting of Ireland’s first set to laws dealing with assisted human reproduction
and surrogacy.
Approval was given at today’s meeting of
ministers for the drafting of a general scheme, or Heads, of the Bill. It is
unclear where the legislation can be enacted in the lifetime of the current
Government, which extends to April 2016 at the latest.
The proposed Bill for Assisted Human
Reproduction and Stem Cell Research aims to regulate this area for the first
time and end the existing legal vacuum.
At least one of those involved in a surrogacy
arrangement would have to be a genetic parent under the proposals to be brought
to Government by Minister for Health Leo Varadkar.
The proposals are designed to reform the law in
accordance with recent Supreme Court decisions
and will cover the transfer of parentage from a surrogate to an “intending”
parent.
The Bill, which Department of Health officials have been drafting over the past year, will set out
proposals to regulate or limit practices in the areas of surrogacy, embryo
donation, sperm and egg (gamete) donation as well as areas of associated
research.
The legislation aims to safeguard the welfare,
safety and best interests of children, bring certainty to the area for
potential parents and provide guidance on what is permitted in terms of
research.
The programme for government contains a
commitment to legislate to “clarify the law surrounding assisted human
reproduction, including the law relating to parental relationships arising from
assisted human reproduction”.
It was originally intended that surrogacy
arrangements would be dealt with in the Child and Family Relationships Bill
being developed by the Department of Justice. However, after the resignation of
former minister for justice Alan Shatter, his successor Frances Fitzgerald announced
the provisions on surrogacy would no longer be included in that Bill.
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