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Incest
could soon be legal in Germany. A government ethics committee says the ban is
unacceptable as it doesn’t allow the right to sexual self-determination. The
comments are in regard to a well-publicized relationship between a brother and
sister, RT reports.
Patrick
Stuebing lived with his partner, Susan Karolewski, who turned out to be his
sister and the couple had four children together, two of whom were disabled.
They did not know each other when they were growing up, as they were raised
separately. They only met when Stuebing was 24 and Karolewski was 16.
“Criminal
law is not the appropriate means to preserve a social taboo,”
the German Ethics Council said in a statement on Wednesday. “The fundamental right of adult siblings
to sexual self-determination is to be weighed more heavily than the abstract
idea of protection of the family.”
The
ethics board is made up of 26 members, who garnered the opinion of scientists,
doctors, theologians and lawyers. The chairman of the council, Christiane
Woopen, was among the 14 members voting in favor of revoking section 173, while
nine people voted for the ban to continue and two abstained. Following the
majority decision, they are now going to ask the government to reconsider the
law, which states that incest is illegal in Germany.
“According
to all available data, sibling incest appears to be very rare in Western
societies,” the government-funded advisory board said in a
statement.
“But
affected people have described how difficult their situation is,”
the statement continued. “They
feel that their basic rights are not respected and forced into secrecy or
denial of their love.”
Arguments
to ban incest have also focused on the likely hood of children being born with
disabilities, due to a lower gene pool. However, this was rejected by the
council.
Stuebing
was sentenced to prison for three years in 2005 by a court in Leipzig after
being convicted of incest. He subsequently lost appeal hearings, before taking
his case to the European Court of Human Rights, concerning his right to a
family life. However he was unable to overturn the ruling, with the court
making its decision in 2012.
Speaking
to CNN in 2007, Stuebing explained that he and his sister had fallen in love,
and simply wanted to have their relationship legalized.
"We
just want to lead a normal life," he said. "People harass us all the time and
call us ‘the incest couple’. They have no idea who we really are or how it all
happened."
Three
of the children, who were born between 2001 and 2005, have been taken into
care, while Karolewski was allowed to keep the youngest.
However,
it does not look as though a change in the law is going to happen in the near
future. A spokeswomen for German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democrat
Union party, which is to the right of the political spectrum said that
legalizing incest would send out the wrong signals.
“Abolishing
criminal punishment against incestuous actions within a family would go
completely against protecting the undisturbed development of children,”
spokeswoman Elisabeth Winkelmeier-Becker told Deutsche Welle.
Incest is also illegal in
the United Kingdom, however it is legal in France, with that country abolishing
laws forbidding relationships between siblings around 300 years ago, under
Napoleon Bonaparte.
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