| |
Article
courtesy of BBC News
A man who donated sperm to a lesbian couple is being made
to pay maintenance by the Child Support Agency (CSA). Andy
Bathie, 37, from Enfield, north London, claims he was assured
by the couple he would have no personal or financial involvement
for the children. He donated his sperm as a friend rather
than go through a fertility clinic. The CSA said only anonymous
donors at licensed centres are exempt from being treated as
the legal father of a child born as a result of their donation.
Mr Bathie, a firefighter, said he cannot afford to have children
with his own wife due to the financial implications.
The lesbian couple, who approached the couple five years ago
after they married in a civil ceremony, have a boy and a girl.
Mr Bathie said he reacted with "shock, anger and despair",
when he was contacted by the CSA in November. He said: "I
don't have any particular ill will. It's the fact that I still
even now don't see why I should have to pay for another couple's
children."
A spokesman for Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority
(HFEA) said: "The law says that men donating sperm through
licensed fertility clinics are not the legal father of any
child born through that donation.
"Men giving out their sperm in any other way - such as
via internet arrangements - are legally the father of any
children born with all the responsibilities that carries."
A spokeswoman for CSA said: "Unless the child is legally
adopted, both biological parents are financially responsible
for their child - the Child Support Agency legislation is
not gender or partnership based."
Ministers have drawn up fertility reforms giving equal parenting
rights to same-sex couples who "marry" in a civil
partnership. This means they will be recognised as the legal
parents of children conceived through sperm donation.
The change comes too late for Mr Bathie, although he is now
pushing for an amendment to make the laws retrospective.
|
|