Ana Obregón has become the character of the moment after announcing her decision to become a mother for the second time. She has achieved it thanks to surrogacy, in the United States, where the procedure is completely legal.

However, the fact that Ana has decided to be a mother again at the age of 68 has generated a heated debate in all kinds of sectors, surpassing the scope of the social chronicle and even being discussed within the walls of Congress. A controversy that has unleashed all kinds of criticism, comments, support and even insults to the actress; something that her sister Celia de ella, one of the few who knew what the process in which Ana Obregón was immersed, does not quite understand.

Celia García Obregón spoke for the first time about the new motherhood on Wednesday afternoon, assuring that all family members were “in shock.” Very shy with the press, the actress’s younger sister limited herself to stressing that her sister was “happy.”

However, her attitude changed radically on Thursday morning, after the maelstrom and the comments that her sister’s motherhood has unleashed. Celia Obregón was intercepted again this morning by reporters, but her attitude was much more serious than the day before.

“We are happy for Ana, but we are hallucinated by the one that has been set up,” he assured, insisting that he did not understand the criticism that he had decided to be a mother again: “With the problems that exist in Spain, it is terrifying that it is almost a All this is a matter of State. It’s very sad,” he lamented.

Speaking of her sister’s condition, Celia Obregón limited herself to insisting that they did not intend to comment on the subject, but she was “very happy” about the birth of little Ana.

Celia Obregón made reference to the comments of the Minister of Equality, Irene Montero, who explained as a result of the news that the new Law on sexual rights and reproductive rights specifies that surrogacy “is not legal in Spain” and recognizes it as ” a form of violence against women. A position that was also defended by the Minister of Finance, María Jesús Montero, who recalled that it is a practice that is not legal and that its advertising is prohibited.

For her part, the Minister of Education, Pilar Alegría, described the image of Ana Obregón leaving the hospital in a wheelchair as “dantesque”: “The person who left in a wheelchair, as far as I know, is not the woman who has given birth”, he commented.

The general secretary of the Popular Party, Cuca Gamarra, has not made clear the position of her formation on surrogacy and has warned that it is a “complex aspect that deserves deep and serene debates”, without “forgetting” that it involves minors.