- End of Russian gas via Ukraine sparks unease in eastern Europe
- Zelensky vows Ukraine will do everything in 2025 to stop Russia
- Island-wide blackout hits Puerto Rico on New Year's Eve
- Serbia enters New Year with student protests over train station tragedy
- Romania, Bulgaria join borderless Schengen zone
- US Capitol riot fugitive seeks asylum in Canada
- Musk flummoxes internet with 'Kekius Maximus' persona
- US stocks slip as European markets ring out year with gains
- Olmo's Barcelona future in air over registration race
- Venezuela opposition urges protests against Maduro's inauguration
- Syria's de facto leader meets minority Christians
- Suriname ex-dictator Bouterse to be cremated on Saturday
- £1.5 mn reward offered after 'brazen' London gem raid
- Zimbabwe abolishes the death penalty
- Barcelona race against clock to register Olmo
- Arteta wants Arsenal to hammer away in title race
- Panama marks canal handover anniversary in shadow of Trump threat
- Gaza hospital chief held by Israel becomes face of crumbling healthcare
- Russian advances in Ukraine grew seven-fold in 2024, data shows
- US, European stock markets look to ring out year with gains
- US farmers fret over Trump's deportation plans
- BBC celebrates 100 years of 'poetic' shipping forecast
- West Ham's Bowen sidelined with foot fracture
- Global markets rode AI, interest rate roller coaster in 2024
- Ocalan: PKK chief held in solitary on Turkish prison island
- European stock markets end year with gains
- Yemen's Huthis a 'menace' for Israel despite weakened Iran: analysts
- Rooney exit extends managerial struggles for England's 'golden generation'
- Gaza healthcare nearing 'total collapse' due to Israeli strikes: UN
- German leaders hit back at Musk's support for far right
- Southgate won't be 'Sir' at home after knighthood
- Rooney leaves Plymouth after just seven months in charge
- Kyrgios needs 'miracle' after return from long injury layoff
- Raducanu pulls out of Australian Open warm-up with back problem
- Celebrated S.African contemporary dancer Dada Masilo dies aged 39
- Five talking points at the midway point of the Premier League season
- Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt reach divorce settlement
- Djokovic, Sabalenka win season-openers but Kyrgios loses on return
- Taiwan says 2024 was hottest year on record
- China says shared Covid information 'without holding anything back'
- Kyrgios goes down fighting on return, Sabalenka wins season-opener
- Xi says China must apply 'more proactive' macroeconomic policies in 2025
- Gauff, Paolini on fire as USA, Italy surge into United Cup quarters
- Patients brave mental health desert in Mauritania
- Hart triple-double sparks Knicks to eighth straight NBA win
- Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt reach divorce settlement: report
- Sabalenka opens season with 'tricky' win in Brisbane
- S. Korea starts releasing Jeju Air crash victims to families
- China's frigid northeast thrives on 'little potato' tourism boom
- Paolini on fire as Italy surge into United Cup quarter-finals
European rights court upholds French ban on posthumous procreation
The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) on Thursday upheld France's ban on procreation using stored gametes or embryos originating from a person who has since died.
The judges considered the cases of two women born in 1992, who had sought to have frozen sperm or embryos from their deceased partners transferred to Spain, where posthumous procreation is legal.
One couple, who had been together for 11 years, had sperm frozen soon after the man was diagnosed with brain cancer.
But the woman was unable to conceive a baby through artificial insemination before her husband died in 2019.
She asked that the stored gametes be exported to Spain.
A second woman had already had two children with her husband, the second born through in-vitro fertilisation as the man began suffering from leukaemia.
They were able to store five embryos in 2018, with the woman asking that they be transferred to Spain the following year.
Both women appealed to the ECHR after French authorities refused to allow the transfers.
France's public health code bars posthumous procreation, as well as export of gametes or embryos for purposes illegal under French law.
But the women argued that the government was breaching their rights under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which guarantees respect for private and family life.
- 'A fair balance' -
The European judges found that "domestic authorities had struck a fair balance between the competing interests at stake" and that Paris was "within its discretion" to determine how to treat gametes and embryos.
"In making the contested requests, the applicants' sole aim had been to circumvent French law... they had not put forward any particular arguments that would have justified the law not being applied in their cases," the court said in a statement.
The judges did have one reservation, noting that since 2021 single women and lesbian couples have been able to have children through medically assisted reproduction.
This "reopened the debate as to the relevance of the justification for maintaining the prohibition" on posthumous procreation, they said.
"The Court reiterated that, while (member) states enjoyed a wide discretion in the bioethical sphere, the legislative framework put in place by them had to be coherent," the statement read.
Elsewhere in Europe, Portuguese woman Angela Ferreira last month gave birth to a baby born from the frozen sperm of her dead husband, after her campaigning got a similar ban overturned in 2021.
A.Mahlangu--AMWN