-
Embattled Woods won't captain 2027 Ryder Cup team: PGA of America
-
Judge allows Woods to travel overseas for treatment
-
Chelsea's Bompastor furious as Arsenal reach women's Champions League semis
-
US lifts sanctions on Venezuelan interim leader Delcy Rodriguez
-
Arsenal resist Chelsea rally to reach women's Champions League semis
-
Defending champ Pegula wins WTA Charleston opener
-
New frog species carrying eggs on back discovered in Peru
-
Benfica winger Prestianni denies 'ugly' racism claims
-
Tuchel casts doubt on Foden's World Cup chances
-
Slot hoping Salah can still burnish Liverpool legacy
-
Astronauts strapped in for historic US lunar launch
-
Top World Bank official 'extremely concerned' by fallout of Iran war
-
'Wake-up call': Megan Thee Stallion falls ill during Broadway show
-
Canada's defense enters new phase, Arctic in focus: top military officer
-
France charges man over failed attack on US bank
-
Bayern reach women's Champions League semis after late show sinks United
-
SpaceX files to go public, paving way for record stock offering
-
Delhi make winning start to IPL as Rizvi downs LSG
-
Final ticket sales phase begins for FIFA World Cup
-
Supreme Court skeptical of Trump bid to end birthright citizenship
-
Tractors roll through Vienna as farmers protest
-
PGA Tour, Masters chairman support Tiger recovery pause
-
World Cup winner Goetze extends contract at Frankfurt
-
SpaceX files securities documents to go public: source
-
Armenia cannot be in both EU and Russian customs bloc, Putin says
-
Supreme Court hears landmark citizenship case -- with Trump in audience
-
Chelsea announce record pre-tax loss of £262.4 million
-
Stocks rally, oil drops on Mideast war optimism
-
Starmer says UK to host multi-nation meeting on Hormuz shipping
-
Greece train crash trial resumes after courtroom chaos
-
Trump says Iran asks for ceasefire as Tehran hit by fresh strikes
-
Swiss government eyes dropping purchase of US Patriot air defence system
-
Germany halts rescue efforts for stranded whale
-
IndiGo lands IATA chief Willie Walsh as new CEO
-
Late charging Ganna denies Van Aert at Across Flanders
-
'Embarrassed' Spain probes anti-Muslim chants at Egypt friendly
-
Family of man killed in 2020 arrest to sue French state
-
The 'million dollar' Senna helmet bought at Japan GP
-
Could NATO be collateral damage from Trump's Iran war?
-
Supreme Court hearing landmark citizenship case -- with Trump in audience
-
Three go on trial in Germany over plot to overthrow government
-
Anderson backs England for Australia revenge despite Ashes woes
-
Italy's sport minister asks football chief to step down after World Cup disaster
-
Cambodia extradites accused cyberscam boss to China
-
Supreme Court to hear landmark citizenship case -- with Trump in audience
-
UK police arrest three more over Jewish ambulance attack
-
Wallaby Skelton has 'season cut short' by Achilles injury
-
Armed teenagers on patrol strike fear into Tehran residents
-
Macron lauds Europe's 'predictability' in seeming contrast to Trump
-
Amsterdam marks 25 years of gay marriage with weddings
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.
K.Thomson--BTB