|
Paris – january 13 2026
Yesterday, Madame Annelies Verlinden, Belgian Minister of Justice, met with Olivia Maurel, Spokesperson, and Bernard Garcia, Executive Director of the Casablanca Experts Group for the Universal Abolition of Surrogacy, for talks devoted to the legal, ethical, and international issues related to surrogacy. This meeting is part of the agreement of the Belgian Federal Government which provided for the legalisation of unpaid surrogacy.
Born through surrogacy and now an author and advocate for women’s and children’s rights, Olivia Maurel set out the human, psychological, and legal consequences of this practice, including when it is presented as “altruistic.” She recalled that surrogacy, in whatever form, is based on the contractualisation of pregnancy, the pre-planned separation of the child from the woman who carried them, and the use of the female body, in contradiction with the fundamental principles of human dignity and the non-commodification of the human body.
Bernard Garcia, for his part, highlighted the legal and institutional implications of any attempt to legalise surrogacy. He warned in particular of the risks of normalising a system that fuels transnational reproductive markets and undermines the foundations of filiation law and the principles of child protection.
The discussions also addressed recent developments at the international and national levels, including:
- the recommendation of the United Nations Special Rapporteur on violence against women, Reem Alsalem, describing surrogacy as incompatible with the fundamental rights of women and children;
- positions expressed in the European Parliament;
- the recent condemnation of surrogacy by Pope Leo XIV, in continuity with Pope Francis’s call for its universal abolition;
- Slovakia’s recent decision to enshrine the prohibition of surrogacy in its Constitution;
- and the ongoing debates in Belgium, where the government is examining a bill seeking to authorise a so-called “altruistic,” non-remunerated form of surrogacy.
In this context, Olivia Maurel and Bernard Garcia urged the Belgian authorities not to lead Belgium into a global reproductive market that violates fundamental human rights, particularly those of women and children, and not to contribute to the legitimisation of a transnational system based on the contractualisation of pregnancy.
The representatives of the Casablanca Experts Group recalled that the legalisation of so-called non-remunerated surrogacy does not constitute an ethical alternative to commercial surrogacy, but rather contributes to the normalisation of a system founded on the commodification of women’s reproductive capacities and the planned separation of the child from the woman who gave birth to them. They stressed the need to place the best interests of the child at the centre of all reflection, not merely as a matter of administrative security, but as a fundamental right not to be the object of a contractual project.
This meeting forms part of a growing international momentum in favour of developing a legal instrument aimed at the universal abolition of surrogacy and the effective protection of the fundamental rights of women and children.
The Casablanca Experts Group calls on the Belgian authorities, as well as all European States, to commit resolutely to this path and to reject any form of legalisation or normalisation of surrogacy, whether commercial, so-called “altruistic,” or presented as non-remunerated.
👉 Press Contact : Priscille Braun, General Secretary of Casablanca experts Group – WhatsApp : +33 (0) 6 47 91 70 44 – priscille.braun@declaration-surrogacy-casablanca.org
|