The Bill, cleared by the Cabinet, chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, has incorporated recommendations of a 23-member Rajya Sabha Select Committee and is expected to be introduced in Parliament during the second phase of the Budget Session beginning on March 2.

In place of "close relative", the bill has now proposed that the surrogate mother should be "willing" woman. The select committee had recommended that not only close relatives but any woman, whether she is a widow or divorcee, who is "willing" should be allowed to act as a surrogate mother, Union Minister Smriti Irani told media.

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The Cabinet has also decided that the insurance cover of the surrogate mother which was proposed for 16 months would be increased to 36 months.

Irani said that the surrogacy facility will be provided only to those who have medically necessitated conditions. "These rights would be of Indian married couples and Indian origin couples in which women and men would be of Indian origin."

In single women category, the surrogacy rights would be of widow and divorcee women, the Minister said.

Government sources said that the select committee suggested 15 major changes to the Surrogacy (Regulation) Bill, 2019, including deleting the definition of "infertility" as the inability to conceive after five years of unprotected intercourse on the grounds that it was too long a period for a couple to wait for a child.

The Cabinet also took decisions to protect the interests of the child born through surrogacy, Irani said.

In this endeavour, the Select Committee had also recommended that the order regarding the parentage and custody of the child, issued by a Magistrate, shall be the birth affidavit for the surrogate child.

The Bill seeking to regulate the practice and process of surrogacy was introduced and passed in the Lok Sabha in August last year. The Rajya Sabha, however, referred it to a Select Committee.