Wednesday, 16 October 2019

French assembly approves IVF for single women, lesbians


France's lower house of parliament approved Tuesday a sweeping bioethics bill to give single women and lesbians access to fertility treatments, a move which critics vowed to fight as the legislation moves to the Senate. National Assembly lawmakers voted 359 to 114, with 72 abstentions, in favour of the first major social reform of President Emmanuel Macron's term.
Macron pledged during his 2017 election campaign to support the bill despite deep resistance among right-wing opponents as well as conservative Roman Catholics and other religious groups.
"These measures, while respecting our ethical principles, recognise the family in all its diversity," France's health, justice and research ministers said in a joint statement after the vote.
But the text now heads in January to the Senate, where Macron's centrist party is far outnumbered by the right-wing Republicans.
Tuesday's vote "does not in any way mean this is done," said Ludovine de la Rochere, president of the Protest for Everyone association which has spearheaded opposition to the bill.
Some 75 000 people demonstrated against the measure in Paris earlier this month, and De la Rochere said new protests were planned for November 30 and December 1, and again for January 19.
Her group had also mobilised massively in 2012 and 2013 against the legalisation by Macron's Socialist predecessor Francois Hollande of marriage for homosexual couples.
But that law, which passed nonetheless, did not allow lesbian couples or single women to have children via in vitro fertilisation or other medically assisted means, long a taboo in France.
Many women have instead been forced to go abroad for such treatments, and French courts often refuse to recognise the second mother's maternity rights in the case of same-sex couples.
Under the proposed law, France's healthcare system would cover the cost of the procedure for all women under 43.
It would also allow children conceived with donated sperm to find out the donor's identity when they turn 18, a change from the country's strict donor anonymity protections.

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