“This was an emotional yet a well thought out decision which I have taken after considering all the responsibilities and duties that come with being a parent,” he wrote on Twitter.
Johar, one of Bollywood’s most successful film producers, said his children were his “world and priority” and he was ready to raise them.
In his autobiography “An Unsuitable Boy”, Johar had expressed a desire to adopt or pursue fatherhood through surrogacy.
He’s not the first Bollywood star to chart the course, with actor Tusshar Kapoor fathering a son last year to a surrogate.
Surrogacy is a hot-button issue in India, where the “rent-a-womb” industry is worth between $500 million and $2.3 billion annually, making it the top destination worldwide for the procedure.
India caused an outcry last year when it drafted a law making surrogacy only available to married Indian couples without children, barring single people and homosexuals from this option.
The bill is pending before parliament but if passed would outlaw commercial surrogacy in India.
The bill drew broad criticism from doctors and some political parties but supporters maintain the commercialisation of “motherhood” sees surrogate mothers exploited.
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