The Human Egg Sellers

人类卵子贩卖者

Up First

2026-03-08

30 分钟
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For years, India was thought of as the Wild West of the fertility industry. But in 2021, a new law in India made it illegal for women to sell their eggs or serve as paid surrogates. That law clashed with a growing demand for human eggs within the country. The result: a thriving black market for human eggs. Today, some of the most marginalized Indian women and girls are supplying reproductive material, often with little compensation and at great personal risk. This week on The Sunday Story, NPR correspondent Diaa Hadid and co-reporter Shweta Desai investigate the supply chain of human eggs in India, from fertility clinics catering to the wealthy to the slums of Mumbai and Chennai. And we meet women who have given up some of the most intimate parts of themselves—to survive. To manage podcast ad preferences, review the links below: See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoices NPR Privacy Policy
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  • Support for NPR and the following message come from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation,

  • investing in creative thinkers and problem solvers who help people,

  • communities, and the planet flourish.

  • More information is available at Hewlett.org.

  • I'm Ayesha Roscoe, and this is a Sunday Story from Up First,

  • where we go beyond the news of the day to bring you one big story.

  • Couples began flocking to India around 2002

  • because it was one of the easiest countries where people wanting to have a child could procure eggs and surrogates at about a third of the price it would be in the United States.

  • a multimillion dollar fertility industry boomed and thousands of babies were born of surrogate mothers to the point where one publication called India,

  • quote, a global baby factory.

  • That was until 2021, when much of this industry went underground,

  • in part because of a new law that made it illegal for Indian women to sell their eggs or to be compensated as a surrogate.

  • So this International Women's Day,

  • we go to India to investigate the underground market for human eggs that's taken hold in the past several years.

  • NPR correspondent Dia Hadid and producer Shweta Desai tracked the story for over nine months,

  • tracing how eggs from impoverished women make their way through a chain of agents and clinics to reach couples who seek them to have a baby.

  • They crisscrossed India from the southern city of Chennai to the holy Hindu city of Varanasi,

  • connecting fertility doctors in high-end clinics to women living in slums.

  • And just a heads up,

  • this story contains descriptions of physical abuse and invasive medical procedures.