France
eyes legalizing assisted reproduction for gay women in 2018
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[September 12, 2017] PARIS
(Reuters) - The right of lesbian couples and single women to have access
to assisted reproduction was "a matter of social justice" and will
likely be legislated next year, a French government minister said on
Tuesday.
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The move would mark a significant extension of gay rights in France,
where violent protests preceded the legalization of same-sex
marriage and adoption by homosexual couples in 2013.
"It was a campaign promise. It will be honored," Marlene Schiappa,
minister for gender equality, told BFM TV. She said a bill would
likely pass through parliament in 2018.
Current legislation means that gay women with sufficient funds
travel abroad for artificial insemination while other women without
the financial means cannot. Schiappa said that was unjust.
French law still restricts techniques such as artificial
insemination using donated sperm to heterosexual couples.
A national ethics committee said last June that it backed the idea
of medically assisted procreation for female couples and single
women. Macron, president since May, had set such a recommendation as
a prerequisite to any legislative action.
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(Reporting by Simon Carraud; Writing by Brian Love; Editing by
Richard Lough)
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