In a first, a Swiss gay couple have been recognized as the legal
parents of a child conceived via an American surrogate mother, despite
surrogacy being illegal in Switzerland, reports the U.K.'s Pink News.
The two St. Gallen-based fathers, whose partnership is legally
registered in their home country, chose to have their child through the
artificial insemination of a donor egg by one partner's sperm. Both were
listed as fathers on the U.S. birth certificate, after their
California-based surrogate mother delivered the newborn and abdicated
parental rights.
But when Swiss law still considered the surrogate mother and her
husband the legal parents of the child, the two gay fathers petitioned
the Swiss national registry for parental recognition, supported by their
own local registry.
The Federal Office of Justice (FOJ) appealed the couple's petition,
forcing the case to be decided by St. Gallen's administrative court
earlier this month.
Last week, the court finally announced their decision to recognize
the child's California birth certificate. However, according to Gay Star News,
a note about the child's genetic surrogate parentage will remain on the
record, in a partial acknowledgement of FOJ's complaint.
The justice department can still appeal the decision to Switzerland's
supreme court, but has not yet announced any intention to do so.
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