As early as next Monday, the special bioethics committee will examine the amendments tabled to the bioethics bill. More than 2,000 have been deposited.

VIDEO

The calendar is accelerating on the bioethical law. The special commission set up by the government must examine as of Monday more than 2,000 amendments tabled to establish the law. The evolution of medically assisted procreation (PMA), which agitates the French society at regular intervals, is one of the hottest dossiers. Especially when it is a post-mortem PMA.

In the current state of the bill, a woman who loses her spouse while the couple was already engaged in a path of LDC is not entitled to be implanted her embryo. But the paradox is that the text of the law in its current version allows it to give its embryo to a single woman, who with this law, will have the right to have a single child. So why an unmarried woman and not a widow? This is the question some people ask themselves.

Things could evolve, but this implies, in particular, having asked the father, before his death, whether he accepts - in the event of death - that his wife continues the parental project.

Red lines

Some things, on the other hand, will not evolve. There is no question of touching the birth certificate of a child born of heterosexual parents by donation of sperm or outside oocyte for example.

The law provides for the use of a third party donor to be registered in the birth certificate for children born to LDCs of couples of homosexual women. The notion "by consent" will be written on the birth certificate.

For heterosexual couples, this will remain secret for the child. Unless his parents decide to tell him. The government does not want to upset the rights of filiation for heterosexuals.