A brother and sister launched a campaign to legalize incest in Germany. Their requests were brought to the Human Rights Court in 2012. Countries such as France, Turkey, Japan and Brazil have already legalized sexual relations between relatives, it can be read on the PestiSrácok portal.

Based on information from the Daily Mail, Femcafe writes that the brother and sister campaigning for the legalization of incest already has four children - two of whom were born with disabilities - and live in East Germany, where incest between siblings is still illegal. Earlier, Jürgen Kunze , a German geneticist, told the BBC: "We need a law against incest in Germany and throughout Europe. This is based on the long traditions of Western societies, and the law was created for compelling reasons. Medical research has shown that the risk of genetic disorders is higher when close relatives have children together. If siblings have a child, there is a 50 percent chance that the child will be disabled."

By the way, the brother and sister were brought to court in 2002 for incest, and the district court was told that Stübing "only bothered to use a condom at the beginning". After years of battling the legal system in Germany, Stübing and Karolewski have now launched a campaign to legalize incest. Incest is punishable by death in, for example, Afghanistan, Iran, Saudi Arabia and Nigeria, but the practice is also prohibited by law in the United Kingdom and Hungary.

In 2016, young people in Sweden fought to legalize incest between siblings and, with prior consent, necrophilia. The Stockholm organization of the Liberala ungdomsförbundet (LUF) also made a decision then that they would not only support the legalization of consensual sexual relations over the age of 15 in the case of siblings, but also that everyone should be free to decide whether to have sex after death without criminal consequences. to have intercourse with his dead body. The proposal was swept off the table at the time, and the proponents were simply described as "sensationalist fools". However, it is telling that previously the German Ethics Council also demanded the abolition of the criminalization of incest, but in 2014 this was rejected by the CDU led by Angela Merkel.

Source: PestiSrácok