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Australian Coupe Abandon Baby in Bangkok Hospital

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Gammyā€™s surrogate mother is trying to raise funds to pay for a heart operation.

Gammyā€™s surrogate mother is trying to raise funds to pay for a heart operation.

 

BANGKOK – A baby boy abandoned by his Australian parentsĀ is so gravely ill in a Thai hospital his surrogate mother believes his death is imminent.

Six-month-old Gammy has been rushed to hospital with a lung infection, as Australians raised tens of thousands of dollars to get him medical care.

Gammyā€™s surrogate mother is trying to raise funds to pay for a heart operation.

Gammyā€™s surrogate mother is trying to raise funds to pay for a heart operation.

But his 21-year-old mother, Pattharamon Janbua, told a Thai reporter at the hospital: “I think the baby will not make it because his lung infection is too serious.”

Ms Pattharamon told the reporter she has no money to pay the hospital, despite Australians rushing to donate money so that Gammy, who has Down syndrome, can receive desperately needed treatment for a congenital heart condition.

The reporter from Thai Rath newspaper gave money to Ms Pattharamon so she could stay in the hospital outside of Bangkok.

Australians responded with an outpouring of generosity whenĀ Fairfax Media revealed an anonymous Australian couple took Gammyā€™s healthy twin sister to Australia but left Ms Pattharamon to try to save Gammyā€™s life.

Ms Pattaramonā€™s family was struggling to pay debts last year when she was offered the equivalent of $11,700 to be a surrogate mother.

Australian authorities are now investigating Gammyā€™s circumstances and in discussion

with their Thai counterparts about surrogacy in Thailand.

There are currently around 400 surrogate pregnancies and babies involving Australian parents in Thailand, according to Surrogacy Australia.

“The alleged circumstances of the case raise broader legal and other issues relating to surrogacy in Thailand,” a spokesman for the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade said.

“We hope to be in a position to provide further comment and advice to the Australian public in coming days.”

An online fund-raising site, “Hope for Gammy”, established more than a week ago, had received just $6000 in pledges by Thursday, but donations began flooding in on Friday after Fairfax Media revealed thge babyā€™s plight.

By late on Friday, more than $60,000 had been donated to Gammyā€™s cause.

In the comments posted to the page by donors, Gammy’s Australian parents have been viciously attacked.

“What a disgrace these parents are [if you can call them parents],” one person wrote.

“Honestly who ever they are they don’t deserve to be parents in abandoning [their] son just because he is sick, how dare they even be called parents, shame on them. I too hope they are found and held accountable for this,” another said.

Ms Pattharamonā€™s family were struggling to pay off debts last year when she was offered the equivalent of $11,700 to be a surrogate mother for an Australian couple who could not conceive a baby.

Ms Pattharamon says three months after a doctor injected the Australian womanā€™s fertilised egg into her uterus, she discovered she was having twins.

The agent promised her an additional $1673 to have the second baby.

Four months into the pregnancy, doctors doing routine checks discovered one of the babies had Down syndrome. They told the Australian parents, who said they did not want to take the boy, according to a source familiar with the case.

ā€œThey told me to have an abortion but I didnā€™t agree because I am afraid of sin,ā€ Ms Pattharamon says, referring to her Buddhist beliefs.

When the babies were born the agent took the healthy girl and left the boy with her.

Ms Pattharamon never saw the Australian couple.

Under the threat of not being paid, she lied to an official of the Australian embassy in Bangkok about the circumstances of the births, which allowed the Australians to take the healthy baby.

ā€œBut the agent never paid the rest of the 70,000 baht ($2341) owed to me,ā€ she says.

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