Same-sex couple loses court bid to take twin daughters born to SA surrogate home to Namibia

Windhoek High Court dismissed an application by a same-sex couple to allow their twin daughters, born through surrogacy in South Africa, to enter Namibia.

Windhoek High Court dismissed an application by a same-sex couple to allow their twin daughters, born through surrogacy in South Africa, to enter Namibia.

Published Apr 20, 2021

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Johannesburg - The Windhoek High Court has dismissed an application by a same-sex couple to allow their twin daughters – born through surrogacy in South Africa – to enter Namibia.

Namibian media reports said that Judge Thomas Masuku dismissed the application on Monday.

Daily newspaper Namibian Sun on its social media account reported that Masuku upheld the decision of the Ministry of Home Affairs to deny the twins entry into the country.

Maya and Paula were born via surrogacy to Namibian Phillip Lühl and his husband, Guillermo Delgado, on March 13 in Durban, South Africa.

Lühl filed a high court application last month, asking the court to order Minister of Home Affairs Frans Kapofi to issue emergency travel certificates or to allow him to enter Namibia with the two babies born in South Africa.

In his affidavit, Lühl argued that he cannot leave South Africa without his twin daughters as he has no one to leave them with.

He said Kapofi was infringing on his right to return to Namibia by trapping him in South Africa.

Kapofi requested DNA results as proof of paternity.

The minister said Lühl and the twins should be subjected to a paternity test to remove any doubt pertaining to paternity.

Lühl and Delgado got married in South Africa in 2014.

According to local newspaper Informante, Lühl and Delgado, a Mexican, appear on the South African-issued birth certificates as the rightful parents.

Gay Nation, an online magazine for the gay community, reported last month that the surrogacy agreement between the couple and the woman who agreed to carry the babies was approved and confirmed by the high court of South Africa in November 2017. In terms of that agreement, the children born through surrogacy were declared to be the children of Lühl and Delgado from the moment of their birth.

The couple are also still fighting for their son, born in 2019 through a surrogate in South Africa, to get Namibian citizenship.

The Star

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