Incest laws
could be scrapped in Germany after the government's ethics council said
sex between brothers and sisters should be legal and is a 'fundamental
right'.
The
council recommended that the right of 'adult siblings to sexual
self-determination' was more important then the 'abstract idea of
protection of the family'.
It
comes after the case of Patrick Stuebing, who was jailed for more than
three years after having four children - two of which are disabled -
with his sister Susan Karolewski.
Stuebing was put up for adoption as a
toddler and only met his sister when he was 24 and she was 16. He was
imprisoned for incest in 2008.
He made an
unsuccessful appeal to the European Court of Human Rights in 2012 over
his right to a family life - as he and Ms Karolewski were split up and
three of their children were taken into care. The youngest was allowed
to remain with Ms Karolewski.
The
German Ethics Council said in a statement that 'criminal law is not the
appropriate means to preserve a social taboo', adding that the risk of
disability to children is enough to warrant incest being illegal.
Neither the
consequences for the family nor the possibility for descendants from
such incestuous relationships can justify a ban under criminal law,' it
said.
'Incest
between siblings appears to be very rare in Western societies according
to the available data but those affected describe how difficult their
situation is in light of the threat of punishment.
'They feel their fundamental freedoms have been violated and are forced into secrecy or to deny their love.
'The
Ethics Council has been told of cases where half-siblings did not grow
up together and have only met in their adult lives,' The Independent
reported it saying.
Despite
saying that sex between brothers and sisters should be made legal, the
council recommended that sex between parents and children should remain
against the law.
It
is believed that incest increases the risk of children being born with
disabilities, but the Ethics Council dismissed this as an argument for
it being illegal, saying that couples with genetic defects are not
banned from having children.
However, Chancellor Angela Merkel's CDU party have been quick to push away the idea of legalising incest.
Spokeswoman
Elisabeth Winkelmeier-Becker said that it would give out the wrong
signal, telling Deutsche Welle: 'Abolishing criminal punishment against
incestuous actions within a family would go completely against
protecting the undisturbed development of children.'
Around
two to four per cent of Germans have had 'incestuous experiences',
according to an estimate by the Max Planck Institute reported by The
Telegraph.
Incest
is illegal in the UK and most of Europe, though sex between consenting
adults who are related is legal in France, Spain, Portugal, Belgium,
Luxembourg and The Netherlands.
end times o.......thunder fire them
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