Illegal use of fertilized eggs outside the womb (A comparative study)
Abstract
The medical - biological reality - witnessed a series of mutations at the levels of predictive medicine and hospital medicine, and these developments were accompanied by responses of varying speed and method of organization among legal legislators in the world, some of them went along with it, and some of them kept reading it from a distance.
After the completion of the activities of assisted fertilization techniques or during them, especially external fertilization, the embryos may find their way to the uterus directly, or their transfer or implantation may be postponed for a time that may be long or short, as the spouses may agree to freeze the fertilized eggs (embryos) in banks Preservation, so the embryos are subject to the techniques of transfer, preservation and implantation, each of which may have an impact on the continuation or integration of the embryo. Therefore, we will focus in this regard on the technology of transferring embryos and implanting them in the uterus and the problems faced by this technology.
The hypothesis of the research will focus on a basic pillar, which is that embryos are nothing, as others imagine, and are not an incomplete creation without full humans, as others see it, but rather it is an age stage that any human being goes through, such as the stage of childhood, the stage of youth, and the stage of old age, and we will prove This hypothesis is carried out by various means, including textual and non-textual means.
The issue of human rights will be prominent in all aspects of the research. In this research, reference will be made to some European and American constitutional, legislative and international texts.
Among the problems that have emerged as a result of the biological revolution in the field of using fertilized vaccines outside the womb is entering into the framework of trafficking for the purpose of illegal gain, and their circulation in a way that does not depart from the circulation of money in criminal human markets, or through black market gangs, and also the uses of these vaccines in a way Illegal gangs deviated from the field for which it was allocated, or for which the legality of artificial insemination or fertilization of human insemination was decided to fertilize them outside the womb under pressure, coercion or coercion.
The research was divided into three demands, as follows:
First: Criminal responsibility for trafficking in fertilized eggs outside the womb.
Second: Criminal responsibility for the illegal use of fertilized human insemination outside the womb.
Third: criminal responsibility for destroying the surplus fertilized egg outside the womb.