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I'm Ayesha Rosco, and this is the Sunday story from Up First, where we go beyond the news of the day to bring you one big story. Couples began flocking to India around 2002 because it was one of the easiest countries where people wanting to have a child could procure eggs and surrogates at about a third of the price it would be in the United States. A multimillion dollar fertility industry boomed and thousands of babies were born of surrogate mothers, to the point where one publication called India, A Global Baby Factory. That was until 2021, when much of this industry went underground. Ground, in part because of a new law that made it illegal for Indian women to sell their eggs or to be compensated as a surrogate. So this International Women's Day, we go to India to investigate the underground market for human eggs that's taken hold in the past several years. Npr correspondent Diha Hadid and producer Shweta Desai track this story for over nine months, tracing how eggs from impoverished women make their way through a chain of agents and clinics to reach couples who seek them to have a baby. They crisscross India from the Southern city of Chennai to the holy Hindu city of Varanasi, connecting fertility doctors in high-end clinics to women living in slums.
And just a heads-up, this story contains descriptions of physical abuse and invasive medical procedures. Teachers. Diya Hadid takes a story after the break. Stay with us.
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We're back with a Sunday story. Here's NPR's Diya Hadid.
It took us months to find the woman we are calling H. She asked that we don't use her name because she fears for her safety. She works in an industry that is so underground, so secretive, that to find her, my co-reporter Shweta Desai has to go through a chain of people, each suspicious of who we are and what we're doing. Then H, well, Shweta is on the phone with her for weeks before she agrees to meet us in person at a cafe in a commuter town near Wumbai. That's India's sprawling Port City. She walks in late wearing a long black robe and a black head scarf, which throws us off. H is Muslim, but we didn't expect her to be religious or conservative. She laughs when we comment on it. She lightly touches her hijab and says, She's only wearing it because we're in a Muslim-majority area, and she doesn't feel comfortable in jeans and a T-shirt around here. Eich is one of the countless Indian women who sells her eggs to survive. Couples are in the market for a human egg to have a baby like how she looks, pale skin, thick hair, an hour glass figure, a pretty smile.
She says, I have good eggs. They make good babies.
We.
Eich is 35. She tells us that she started selling her eggs about five years ago after she left her husband. It was a miserable, arranged marriage. Eich says her conservative Muslim family didn't let her come home. She'd shamed them for seeking a divorce. Without a home, she couldn't care for her two children, so her ex-husband got custody. She says she moved in with a man who offered her shelter. But when he lost his job, he pestered her for rent. Eich had no money and no skills. A girlfriend told her, You're young and you're pretty. Sell your eggs. Lots of girls do it. I've done it. Do it and see.
Eich was confused.
It sounded like sex work. Like most Indian women we meet for this story, she'd never been taught about the human body's reproductive plumbing. Her friend told her…
Producer Shwerade Desai translates.
The friend said, This is just about providing a part of your body to another person, and once that will work, they will have the babies.
Despite India's latest law banning the sale of eggs, the demand continues to be enormous. Fertility clinics and academics tell us it's because women are marrying later, but they still want to have children, so they're turning to the fertility industry for help. At a time when taboos about fertility are shifting. Indian celebrities are openly talking about seeking help to have babies, and there are screwball Bollywood movies like this one called Good News.. This process is called in vitro fertilization, IVF. Perfect. Let's do it. About two couples who accidentally have each other's babies. Mr. And Mrs. Batra.
Yes.
You also, Batras?
Yeah. Wow, we also. In India, the ultra-rich can buy special VIP services to have a baby.
I've worked with a lot of people from Bollywood, and I'm currently A lot of them. In fact, I was with someone yesterday, one of the richest families in Bollywood yesterday.
In a noisy café, Shweta Desai and I meet a man who runs a boutique reproductive agency with offices flung around the world. He requests we don't use his name because the work he does, he describes it as operating in a gray zone.
Depending on your economic status, your budget, sexual preferences, single, married, unmarried, etc. Whether you want an Asian donor, Caucasian donor, Indian donor, African donor, I can place them anywhere in the world, Hispanic as well.
He says, Basically?
It's like having what's the Bumble or Tinder? I'm the Bumble or Tinder, but a more for surrogacy.
On his folding phone that opens like a tablet, he shows us some of the Indian models and actresses whose eggs he purchases for clients.
This is what we call a premium donor.
Premium donors.
I'll show you the database of... Yeah, this This is like I have a batch in March and April. I'll tell you, these are the girls that have approached us.
He pulls out the profile of one of these women.
Let me just pick up this girl. This is just a good-looking girl from Mumbai. Just see the profile. This is just any other girl you'll find. Wow.
She's gorgeous. On the screen, the young woman has long, glossy brown hair, clear olive skin, and smiling brown eyes. I'm really curious about the egg donation aspect. What makes someone premium? Is it skin color, beauty. Is it education? Is it age?
It's a combination of all these things, gut feeling, and also medical thing as well.
He says these premium donors are paid between $3,000 to $7,000 for their highly sought-after eggs. To extract those premium eggs, he says he has two options. He can arrange a procedure for the woman in India.
It depends. If the clinic in India is willing to do this under the table, behind the scenes, without registering them, we can do it in India.
Under the table. Otherwise?
We fly them out to Bangkok or to Georgia or to Kenya.
He paints it as a glamorous side hustle for the women involved and talks about a premium donor he's sent to Kenya.
She was supposed to go for a safari today. I kept her wondering. Where is she from? Yeah. She's coming back in a few hours. She should be about to land now.
A safari. But for the majority of women who supply their biomaterial to the fertility industry, the reality is far from glamorous..
.
Avi Karame is 34 and lives in a slum in the Southern city of Chennai. Like other women we interview in this slum, she asked to only use her first name because she doesn't They're going to risk getting in trouble. The women belong to a group at the bottom of South Asia's caste hierarchy. They're known as Parayar, from where the English gets the word pariah. Abirami and her girlfriends walk us through their homes, each a tiny room in a row of tiny rooms down a tight alleyway. They're painted bright blues and purples. Where do people sleep?
.
The mats are rolled in one corner, a gas burner for cooking in the other. Abirami's husband polishes spoons in a steel mill for about a dollar a day. She says he drinks away his wages. They have two daughters, but they live with Abhirami's sister-in-law.
That's because Abhirami has no time to care for them.
She works in a toy workshop assembling plastic guns for about $3 a day.
Twice, she says, she sold her eggs to put food on the table for rent.
Abirami first heard about selling eggs from her neighbor while standing in line for her turn at the water pump. She pleaded with her neighbor, Tell me where I can go and do it.
Abirami says when she told her husband about her plans, he thought it was sex work.
She sniffs, he doesn't understand the difference between thick and thin.. Abhirami says her neighbor told her, Forget about your damn husband. He's not paying the rent. You'll get ₱25,000, ₱300, more than what she'd make in three months at the plastic gun factory. Her neighbor knew about selling eggs because she had been in and out of hospitals herself. To make ends meet, she used to sell her blood. She once sold her eggs when she was younger. She was once paid to carry a baby, and she sold a kidney. She She shows us the scars. She took Abirami to a fertility clinic. Abirami says she can't read. She only finished school to the second grade. But her neighbor told her it was seven stops away on the bus, so she counted them. Abirami says in the fertility clinic, she was hustled into a room where patients couldn't see her. A nurse filled out a form on her behalf and told her to sign it with a thumbprint. Abhirami says a nurse put gel on her stomach and scanned her. She says she was told to come back after she got her period. When she returned, she was injected.
She's not sure with what, but it was most likely hormones to stimulate her ovaries to produce more eggs.
Every day for about In 10 days, Abirami went back to the clinic.
She counted seven bus stops to know where she had to get off, and the nurse ushered her into a room to be injected. She says she thought she'd die from the nausea she was experiencing. She began swelling around her stomach. Based on what we've heard from doctors, her response to the injections sounds like she'd been overstimulated, which isn't uncommon. She focused on the money she'd make. But when her husband noticed her swelling, she says he beat her up. Abhirami remembers shouting at him, You drink away your money. I don't have enough for rice.
She says she hid at her neighbor's house until it was time for her to have her eggs extracted. For that, a doctor They put her under anesthesia.
She isn't sure how the eggs came out, but typically, they're removed with a long, thin needle that goes through the wall of a woman's vagina, and they're extracted from follicles on a woman's ovaries. The nice thing Abhirami says was that she got to sleep overnight in the hospital for the procedure. Even so, she says, her pain didn't end after her eggs were extracted.
.
Two years later, she sold her eggs for the same amount. For years, India's for-profit fertility industry was under regulated and highly commercial. But after a series of scandals, lawmakers reacted with a dramatic restructuring. In 2021, the Assisted Reproductive Technology Act, or ART law, as it's called, restricted access to to married heterosexual couples and demanded that women provide their biological material for free. This is what the underground market looks like now. Marginalized women, often desperate for money, sell their eggs for a fraction of the cost that it would be in the US. Despite the great toll it takes on them and the cash being exchanged, fertility clinics and egg banks call this a donation. Academics who've researched this What does this industry say as it exists? It's a disaster for vulnerable women.
You've told yourself you've done something, but actually you've only made it worse.
That's Vrinda Marva. She's an assistant professor at the University of South Florida, and she studied the fertility industry.
You've created a Black market. You've pushed it underground, which means the people participating in it have no protections. They have no bargaining power. If something goes wrong, they're already doing something criminal, something illegal. Who are they going to turn to for help?
We spoke to three members of the Regulatory Board that oversees implementation of India's Assistered Reproductive Technology Laws. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they're not authorized to speak to the media. They said the laws were designed to offer legal clarity for the industry, safety for couples trying to have a baby, and guaranteed medical insurance and care for the women whose eggs were being harvested or who were acting as surrogates. The law was meant to halt the exploitation of those women. The board members we spoke to said they were not aware of the vast underground market that has emerged since these new laws were passed. A senior member of the board was also not aware that in one case, in the northern city of Varanasi, a 13-year-old girl was lured into selling her eggs to one of India's largest fertility clinic franchises. We met her at a charity that defends women who've been trafficked. Her parents request we keep her identity anonymous. They say their daughter's been socially stigmatized, and she dropped out of school after her classmates found out that she sold her eggs. She's now 15. She says about two years ago, a neighbor told her she'd get $180 for her eggs.
She didn't understand. Eggs? Like a chicken? No. But she says she really wanted a smartphone. The teenager's lawyer, Krishna Gopal, believes this is happening to other miners, but there's no incentive for families to come forward. The teenager's neighbor was arrested, but he says the police have not followed up with the clinic that extracted her eggs. The clinic in question is part of the Nova IVF fertility franchise. In a statement, Nova IVF Fertility said that the teenager was screened by a separate company that signed off on having her eggs harvested. Industry professionals who are critical of the new laws say There's just not enough oversight of this massive industry. Consider this. According to the Indian Health Ministry, there's nearly 8,600 fertility clinics and egg banks operating in India. Just over 3,200 are actually registered. That's less than half. Eich says in her experience, the industry does what the industry wants. She says clinics and egg banks don't look very hard at her IDs. She has two, and they're fake to maximize her egg sales. The fake IDs list her as being under 30 because young women get more business. She's also lied about her height. She's on the short side.
She's lied about her faith. H is Muslim, but sometimes she pretends she's converted to Hinduism if that's needed. Clinic directors say some couples only want eggs from a woman who matches their faith.
Coming up after the break, the middlemen, mostly women, who operate in this underground market and how they shield the industry from accountability. We're back. This is the Sunday story with more from NPR's Diya Hadid.
Pacing Getting together how the industry functions was not easy. Doctors and clinic directors don't want to go on the record about their clients or their dealings. But here's what one prominent fertility doctor told us about the process. On the condition that we don't use her name or voice because she doesn't want to come into the government's crosshairs. We confirmed her account in dozens of other conversations with researchers, fertility clinic directors, and women who sell their eggs. The doctor said when a couple comes to her and the woman can't produce her own eggs, she tells them that her hospital will help them, but it's going to cost a little extra. One way she procures those eggs is through an agent. An agent is the person who will often end up finding women. They move them through the process of extracting their eggs, and they pay them. This go-between person allows the fertility clinic to We aren't paying women for their eggs. We're paying an agent to recruit women for us. It was even harder to get an agent to speak to us, but we found one woman. Her name is Ruby. We connected over a crackly Zoom call.
Hello.
Diya, this is Ruby.
She asked we only use her first name. Of course, her work isn't legal. She Ruby says she had a dead-end job at a New Delhi call center and wanted to make more money. Her friend talked her into selling her eggs, and then Ruby realized she could make more as an agent. We hear it's common for women who age out of selling their eggs to turn to this hustle. Each month, Ruby gets about a dozen requests for egg donors, mostly over WhatsApp. Ruby says clinics mostly want women who are educated, light-skinned and pretty. She calls them high-profile women. She finds them through her networks and social media. Ruby will find a donor, agree on a price, get their details. Sometimes she directs women to their scans, arranges their daily hormone jabs, lines up their egg retrieval. Clinics pay Ruby. She takes a carte between $50 to $100 dollars and then passes the rest on. She says her recruits are mostly poor. They've got alcoholic husbands. They're single mothers. They've got money problems.. There is an entire industry that's living off these women's biomaterial, but then you don't want to pay the women themselves. This is Prabha Kodeswaran, a professor of law at King's College in London.
She's filed what's called an intervention in India's Supreme Court to demand women get legally compensated for the work of producing their eggs.
We live in a capitalist society. This is a sector that's generating so much profit for everyone concerned. Everyone else is getting paid without any restrictions.
She says, Why not the women who enable the industry to exist? Khodeswaran acknowledges a lively debate in feminist circles. Some argue all commercial egg donation and surrogacy should be banned because of how it commodifies women, how it commercializes the creation of a baby.
If that's the case- If you really have a problem with commercialisation, why don't you regulate the private IVF sector? Nobody does that, right? But they want to tell the women they shouldn't do it. It's a very paternalistic approach to say, You're being exploited, you're a victim. We don't want you to be exploited or your body to be commercialized, so why don't you give up everything for free? Then everyone else will use it up for their own purposes and get what they want, pay huge amounts to form their families, but you won't get anything.
Eitja estimates she's harvested her eggs at least 30 times since she began. If each round of eggs produced one baby, she'd have some 30 biological children. Ece is sure, though, she's made more babies than that. She says, If each time they've harvested 20 eggs from my body, you can assume at least 10 kids have popped out. Shweta Desai, who is reporting this story with me, tells her, You are like a super mom.
There's little research on the impacts for women who retrieve their eggs repeatedly.
Critics say that reflects how little value is given to women who provide their biomaterial once their eggs have been removed. But one known impact is ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome. Mild cases can cause bloating. A severe case can cause respiratory distress. According to reports published in two medical journals, two women died after these latest laws were passed, after they were stimulated to produce eggs. Is there more? There's no data, no reporting. Who would these women report to? There's one incident that Ece tells us that has never made it into a police complaint or into data. Two years ago, she says, she went to Chennai to harvest her eggs at a fertility clinic there. The agent, unusually, was a man. She'd never worked with him before, and she didn't like his vibe. She says when she came out of anesthesia, she realized her eye was swollen, her lip was cut, she had welts on her back, and she was wearing a diaper. She said she fled the hospital as soon as she was able. She told us, If that man did something to me, may God punish him. Ever since then, Ej tells us, she experiences a sense of terror before she goes under anesthesia.
Weeks after our first meeting, we see Ece again. This time, we meet at a cafe in downtown Mumbai. She's dressed the way she likes. Jeans, T-shirt, her short hair is fanned out. She's distracted, impatient, and constantly checking her phone. She talks to us while complaining that she's feeling bloated, nauseous, breathless, weak. She's nursing a bruise under her right eye. She says her boyfriend is stressed. He lost another job. She says he didn't mean to hit her hard.
Besides, her face easily bruises.
Shwerda asks her about her short hair and tells me what Eidh tells her.
I had very long hair earlier, but then I just chopped it because of our fight. I said, What happened? She She said, Sadiq held my hair.
Her boyfriend dragged her by her hair on a sidewalk. So she cut it off despite him, maybe also to protect herself.
Because this is what she said. He held her hair, and then what she did was she chopped her hair, and she's like, Now hold it and show me.
She says she's just been cheated by a new agent. She only got half the money she was promised for harvesting her eggs at a well-known hospital. She says she only got a hundred and sixty dollars because the agent told her she didn't produce enough eggs.
Each was counting on that money because she's behind on rent. She says she's taking drugs to try to She's being able to speed up her next period so she can be stimulated sooner to produce more eggs.
Eitre says, I don't have a choice. I know this will kill me, but we'll all die someday, right?
.
What comforts her is thinking about her kids.
. Her 11-year-old daughter, her 13-year-old son.
The ones she birthed herself, they're being raised by her ex-husband. She says, I love them so much. Whenever I can, I give them money. They say I don't have to, but my heart doesn't listen. After all, I'm a mother. She has to run. She pushes back her chair to leave. She's got word that she'll be able to see them.
If She can leg it across town in half an hour.
I'm going to wait here. Thank you so much. She's got to run.
That was NPR's India correspondent, Diya Hadid, and co-reporter Shweta Desai. This episode of the Sunday Story was produced by Justine Yann. It was edited by Jenny Schmidt and Vincent Nee. It was engineered by Robert Rodvier Yes. Special thanks to Giselle Grayson and Anupama Chandra Sakeran. The Sunday Story team includes Andrew Mambo and our Senior Supervising Producer, Lianna Semstrom. Irene Naguchi is our executive producer. I'm Ayesha Rosco. Up First is back tomorrow with all the news you need to start your week. Until then, have a great rest of your weekend.
This message comes from Wise, the app for international people using money around the globe. You can send, spend, and receive in up to 40 currencies with only a few simple tabs. Be smart. Get Wise. Download the Wise app today or visit wise. Com. T's and C's apply.
For years, India was thought of as the Wild West of the fertility industry. But in 2021, a new law in India made it illegal for women to sell their eggs or serve as paid surrogates. That law clashed with a growing demand for human eggs within the country. The result: a thriving black market for human eggs.Today, some of the most marginalized Indian women and girls are supplying reproductive material, often with little compensation and at great personal risk. This week on The Sunday Story, NPR correspondent Diaa Hadid and co-reporter Shweta Desai investigate the supply chain of human eggs in India, from fertility clinics catering to the wealthy to the slums of Mumbai and Chennai. And we meet women who have given up some of the most intimate parts of themselves—to survive.To manage podcast ad preferences, review the links below:See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy