The Bombay High Court has ruled that donating eggs or sperm does not grant the donor legal rights to claim biological parenthood. This decision was made in a case involving a 42-year-old woman who sought to reunite with her 5-year-old twin daughters, conceived using her husband's sperm and her younger sister's egg. The court granted the woman access to her daughters, emphasizing that the egg donor does not have legal rights to the surrogate children.
The case involved a 42-year-old woman seeking to reunite with her 5-year-old daughters, who were conceived using her husband's sperm and her younger sister's egg. #BombayHighCourt #Surrogate https://t.co/3tbxj9YITc https://t.co/egyocYjKNg
The #BombayHighCourt ruled that an egg donor has no legal right to a surrogate child, granting a woman access to her twin daughters born via surrogacy. (Prateem Rohanekar reports) https://t.co/0975sl9NKW
The Bombay High Court on Tuesday held that merely donating eggs or sperm does not give legal entitlement to the donor to claim that she is the biological parent of the child. @purnima_sah_ reports. https://t.co/OxvBSXtWkH