Brother-sister couple fail in fight against anti-incest laws
4/13/2012The European Court of Human Rights has decided to keep incest in Germany illegal, citing the damages inbreeding can cause to offspring. The ECHR was prodded into making such a seemingly obvious statement because of a brother-sister couple who says their home country of Germany had no right to penalize their relationship. The pair did not grow up together, but met in their 20s after the brother, who had been adopted, tracked down his biological family, and they now have four children, two of whom are described as having "disabilities." Surprisingly, if the court had overturned the ban, it would not be the first European effort to decriminalize incest: France doesn't prosecute such relationships, and Sweden allows half-siblings to marry.
Should government enforce the social taboo against incest?
Most Commented
Brad Pitt can't stop trashing his marriage to Jennifer Aniston
This is the bank vault that saved 24 people during Oklahoma tornado
35 police needed to rescue one naked student from mountaintop
'Star Trek' writer apologizes for wedging in underwear scene
18 things we love about Oklahoma
Popular this week
- Shared
- Commented
- Viewed

