Website sells Canadian birthright for $35K to foreign moms
2025/03/11 Leave a comment
One of the problems of alternative media and TikTok influencers is their lack of capacity and knowledge.
The number of suspected birth tourists (non-resident self-pay) has been published annually (by me) and the British Columbia data is no longer the highest given the large drop pandemic and post-pandemic of Chinese birth tourists at Richmond General and other British Columbia hospitals (see Birth tourism has doubled since the pandemic lull):
A suspicious website is advertising would-be mothers from around the world the opportunity to have anchor babies in Canada, ensuring their children become naturalized citizens.
The Russian-language website “CanadaMama consulting” is advertising their services at fees ranging up to $35,000 for migrant women interested in baby-tourism. The website promises a “safe birth” and a “life full of opportunities.”
Potential clients are being lured by the prospect of free education, healthcare, employment opportunities and international travel for their children. The website’s default language is set to Russian, but also has built in English, Ukrainian, Chinese and Spanish translations.
Canadian TikTok influencer Mario Zelaya was the first to bring attention to the website.
Among the services offered to those interested include property rentals, immigration consultation, visa support, medical service advisory and even newborn photography.
Akin to airline companies, the website has multiple package options ranging from economy, to optimal to comfort, with additional services such as food delivery, hospital tours, shopping advice and interpretation services offered to those willing to pay extra.
CanadaMama also claims to operate “under contract” and work alongside Canadian hospitals – an unverified claim.
The company claims to have operated for more than five years, carrying out dozens of successful births
Unconditional birthright citizenship in Canada is attracting many birth tourists, especially in British Columbia–where some hospitals have reported non-citizens making up a quarter of their maternity ward patients.
A Calgary-based obstetrician gynaecologist, Dr. Colin Birch, said in a CBC interview that birth tourism had the biggest impact on cities that had international airports, with trends slowing down after air travel was shut down during the pandemic. …
Source: Website sells Canadian birthright for $35K to foreign moms
