With her wispy grey hair Dalijinder Kaur appears besotted as she looks down on her newborn baby.
But it may not have been down to maternal instinct alone that Mrs Kaur chose to become a mother for the first time aged 72.
It emerged yesterday that Mrs Kaur’s husband Mohinder Singh Gill, 79, may have wanted a child so they could stake a claim in his late father’s £500,000 property.
The couple were desperate to have a child of their own to ‘complete’ their family – but also to try and end a 40-year legal battle between Mr Gill and his family.
Mr Gill, who is a farmer and lives in Amritsar, in Punjab, admitted that they turned to IVF to try and end a legal battle over his father’s inheritance.
He said: ‘My father was trying to deprive me of a share in his property on the plea because I didn’t have a child.
‘We had been engaged in a tussle for more than four decades.’
Mr Gill’s father Uttam Singh, who passed away eight years ago, wanted the property to be split between his children.
However Mr Gill claims his four siblings refused to give him his share because he had no children of his own to take care of.
Mr Gill said: ‘When this fight started, I was in my 40s so my wife and I tried to have a baby but there was some medical complication.
‘We went to see many doctors but it was the 1970s and 80s, so medical facilities weren’t that great.
‘It was embarrassing to not be able to produce a child, no doubt, but we got caught with litigation.’
The couple said they had almost given up on having children when they saw an advert for a fertility clinic in Haryana.
Using donor eggs Mrs Kaur gave birth to a healthy boy in April after two years of treatment.
She said: ‘God heard our prayers. My life feels complete now. I am looking after the baby all by myself. I feel so full of energy.
‘My husband is also very caring and helps me as much as he can.’
She added: ‘When we saw the (IVF) advert we thought we should also give it a try as I badly wanted to have a baby of my own.’
Anurag Bishnoi, an embryologist, is the owner of the National Fertility and Test Tube Baby centre, in Hisar, where Mrs Kaur received her treatment.
He said: ‘For them it is a time of great happiness…in Indian law they don’t allow adoption after 45 years of age.’
Speaking about the birth of his baby son Mr Gill said: ‘People say, what will happen to the child once we die? But I have full faith in God.’
Daljinder Kaur gave birth last month to a boy following two years of IVF treatment at a fertility clinic in the northern state of Haryana with her 79-year-old husband, Mohinder Singh Gill