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{
    "id": 1369167,
    "url": "https://info.mzalendo.com/api/v0.1/hansard/entries/1369167/?format=api",
    "text_counter": 346,
    "type": "speech",
    "speaker_name": "Kilgoris, JP",
    "speaker_title": "Hon. Julius Sunkuli",
    "speaker": null,
    "content": "The two professors are distracting me a bit. Those people have no other means of getting a child other than by getting a surrogate to carry their baby to term. We want to solve this problem. This problem has existed for many years. Communities like the Luo, the Nandi, and the Maasai had a practice where a woman who did not have children was allowed \"to marry.\" They would get a lady – not in the LGBTQ style – but one who would be assigned to her as a wife, but was allowed to get babies from a man. The children would then belong to the one who \"married\" her. The difference with this is that the intended parent had no genetic relationships with that child. Now, technology allows the genes to be implanted into someone else, and the child can be brought up by the parents who donated the egg and the embryo. This new technology is widespread around the world. For a long time, European people, particularly in the United Kingdom (UK), used Indian women to carry their children. Even in our society today, this tends to be the case where poor women carry children for wealthy The electronic version of the Official Hansard Report is for information purposesonly. A certified version of this Report can be obtained from the Hansard Editor."
}