domingo, 1 de marzo de 2020

BioEdge: Israel to allow surrogacy for gay couples and single men

BioEdge: Israel to allow surrogacy for gay couples and single men

Bioedge

Israel to allow surrogacy for gay couples and single men
    
Supreme Court of Israel building 
Israel’s high court has struck down a law which excludes single men and gay couples from using surrogate mothers to have their children. The Knesset has a year to pass a new law.
The High Court of Justice ruled unanimously that Israel’s surrogacy laws “disproportionately violate the right to equality and the right to parenthood of these groups and are illegal.” Supreme Court President Esther Hayut  wrote with two other jusitics, “The sweeping exclusion of homosexual men from the use of surrogacy is viewed as ‘suspicious’ discrimination, suggesting that this part of the population is inferior.”
At the moment, heterosexual couples or single women who are unable to have a child are permitted to access surrogacy.
According to a report in Haaretz, Israelis who want to start the surrogacy process in Israel must obtain government approval. If they are not eligible for surrogacy in Israel or want to speed up what is often a lengthy process due to the small number of women who are willing to act as a surrogate, often go abroad.
Attempts in recent years to expand access to surrogacy to the LGBT community have faced vehement opposition from Haredi political parties.
According to The Times of Israel, a 2018 law which extended eligibility to unmarried women sparked nationwide protests from the LGBT lobby for excluding gay men. It was supported by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, but he was not able to secure a majority to pass it.
The lobby group Avot Ge’im (Proud Fathers) called the ruling a “dramatic and exciting” moment.
Michael Cook is editor of BioEdge
Bioedge

“Progressive! Individuals have a right to ‘self-determined’ suicide, including the freedom to take one's own life and to enlist support provided by third parties. German court rules assisted suicide ban violates citizens' rights to determine their own death.”

This was tweeted by Philip Nitschke, Australia’s indefatigable campaigner for an unfettered right to die. It was a good summary of a decision by the German Federal Constitutional Court on Wednesday, which declared that banning assisted suicide was against Germany’s ‘Basic Law’.

From now on people will be free to seek commercial assistance to help them die. (At least doctors won’t be co-opted, for the moment.) This opens up all sorts of business opportunities. Will there be death doulas in every funeral home? Watch this space.



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Michael Cook
Editor
BioEdge
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