‘The state says our kids don’t exist’ - how LGBT life is changing in Italy - BBC News

Italy is removing children from registers and stopping surrogacy abroad in new rules affecting same-sex couples.
1 day agoShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingImage caption, Maurizio and Mauro have been together for 20 years and had twins through a surrogateBy Sofia BettizaBBC News, ItalyItalian authorities are bringing in new measures targeting LGBT families and making it harder for them to have children. Many same-sex parents feel that a new law, which would make it illegal to have surrogacy abroad, is a personal attack against them.
"We have two options: to stay in Italy and face prison, or to run away."
Husbands Claudio and Davide (not their real names) have a baby on the way through surrogacy - a woman in another country is carrying their son for them.
The practice is illegal in Italy and most of Europe, so couples travel to countries where it is legal - such as the US and Canada - and bring their babies back home.
But the Italian senate is set to approve a bill that would make surrogacy a "universal crime" - one so serious that it would be prosecuted even if committed abroad, like human trafficking or paedophilia.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-66860266?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=KARANGA
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