Author Archives: Andreas R. Ziegler

Hong Kong court rules precluding RIVF genetic mothers from parentage unconstitutional

Hong Kong court rules precluding RIVF genetic mothers from parentage unconstitutional

The Hong Kong Court of First Instance ruled Tuesday that the failure to provide proper recognition for a child born as a result of reciprocal in-vitro fertilization (RIVF) is unconstitutional. However, Judge Coleman will rule later on the question of relief, awaiting further arguments from counsel.

The case concerns provisions from the Births and Deaths Registration Ordinance and the Parent and Child Ordinance. In cases when artificial insemination is involved, the current law considers the male partner of the gestational mother as the father of the child, regardless of the marital status, even if the male partner is not genetically related to the child. However, the city’s current legal framework does not recognize the parentage of the genetic mother of a child born as a result of RIVF. The applicant challenged that the provisions discriminate against families founded on a female same-sex relationship.

Judge Coleman sided with the applicant. He reasoned that the law interfered with the applicant’s right to family life, rights in respect of marriage and family, rights of children and right to equality, all of which stem from the Hong Kong Bill of Rights Ordinance.

The government argued that the court’s inherent jurisdiction can grant the genetic mother the legal parental status, which provides for flexibility to protect the best interest of the child when the commitment and stability of the relationships may vary, and best protects the interest of the child.

Judge Coleman rejected the argument, stating that categorically denying the legal parental status of a genetic mother is not a flexible scheme. He also highlighted the question of why the legal scheme does not provide for the same flexibility to the court for heterosexual couples.

The government also raised a concern that “dual motherhood” may not be a widely accepted notion in the city. Judge Coleman also rejected the argument, stating that it would only provide material benefits to the child if parents could share their duties and responsibilities. In any case, withholding the parental rights and obligations from the genetic mother could not prevent the occurrence of “dual motherhood.”

In his postscript, Judge Coleman quoted the story of King Canute and the Waves. He wrote, “Either way, the inexorable event occurred, and the tide came in. When it did, it was of course necessary to take steps to recognise that fact and to take steps to provide for or accommodate it.”

The applicant is the child of a female same-sex couple. The couple underwent reciprocal in-vitro fertilization in South Africa and gave birth to the child in Hong Kong. However, the Birth Registry refused to register the genetic mother as a parent on the child’s birth certificate.

The city is witnessing the first deadlock between the legislature and the judiciary on the issue of same-sex rights. The city’s top court required the government to introduce an alternative framework that recognizes same-sex relationships two years ago. However, the legislature voted against the government bill on Wednesday. Same-sex rights remain a developing story in Hong Kong.

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Hong Kong rejects bill supporting registration of same-sex partnerships

Hong Kong rejects bill supporting registration of same-sex partnerships

The Hong Kong Legislative Council voted against a controversial bill on Wednesday that would have allowed some same-sex couples to register their partnership legally. It was opposed by 71 votes to 14, leaving Hong Kong’s local government less than two months to comply with their top court’s ruling

The bill follows a 2023 Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal (HKCFA) case that challenged a homosexual couple’s right to be recognized as married. The couple had been married in New York since 2013, and had been trying to get recognized since 2018. The HKCFA gave the government a two-year deadline, October 27, 2025, to establish an alternate legal framework recognizing already existing same-sex marriages. 

To fulfill their duty, the government proposed a new registration system in July 2025. The system would allow for couples who were already married overseas to register, but it still does not currently allow Hong Kong same sex couples to get married. The court had confirmed in  Sham Tsz Kit v. Secretary for Justice that “under Hong Kong law, same-sex couples do not have access to the institution of marriage”, but “access to an alternative framework for legal recognition of their relationship has been compellingly advocated”. 

However, roughly 80 percent of legislators rejected this bill, in fear of destabilizing Hong Kong’s traditional family values. Amnesty International criticized the decision, with Nadia Rahman, Policy Advisor on Gender, stating that “lawmakers have shown an alarming disdain for LGBTI rights” by rejecting the bill. Just before the vote, the human rights group, along with over 30 international organizations, had urged the government in a joint letter to guarantee the bill’s legal recognition, stating the current bill already “falls far short of both international human rights standards and the government’s proclaimed commitments in advancing equality, inclusion and respect for diversity”. 

Given that the bill would have granted same-sex couples from abroad the right to only make medical decisions and post-death arrangements; its rejection by legislators stands in contrast to the courts gradually more flexible stance on equal rights and pro-LGBTI social movements. 

The Legislative Council now has 51 days to revise and re-propose a new bill in order to respect the HKCFA’s ruling and comply with what the court has recognized as a “basic social need”. 

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Switzerland: Adoption of partner’s child will be simplified

L’adoption de l’enfant du conjoint ou du partenaire sera simplifiée

L’adoption de l’enfant du conjoint ou du partenaire sera simplifiée Communiqué de presse | 12.09.2025   Berne, 12.09.2025 – Les enfants qui vivent dès leur naissance avec un parent juridique et leur parent d’intention pourront plus rapidement être adoptés par ce dernier. Cette modification du code civil (CC) permettra de mieux tenir compte des évolutions […]

L’adoption de l’enfant du conjoint ou du partenaire sera simplifiée

France’s female boxers are banned from world championships due to genetic sex test delay

France’s female boxers are banned from world championships due to genetic sex test delay

  • French federation calls exclusion ‘a profound injustice’
  • World Boxing insists it warned all competitors of policy

More: https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2025/sep/04/boxing-world-championships-france-female-boxers-banned-genetic-test-delay

US appeals court rejects Trump bid to restore passport policy targeting transgender people

US appeals court rejects Trump bid to restore passport policy targeting transgender people

By Nate Raymond

September 5, 20252:30 AM GMT+2Updated September 5, 2025

BOSTON, Sept 4 (Reuters) – A federal appeals court on Thursday declined to allow U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration to refuse to issue passports to transgender and nonbinary Americans that reflect their gender identities.

More: https://www.reuters.com/legal/government/us-appeals-court-rejects-trump-bid-restore-passport-policy-targeting-transgender-2025-09-04/

ECJ : Bulgaria asked to recognize trans’ ‘lived gender identity’

ECJ : Bulgaria asked to recognize trans’ ‘lived gender identity’

Mark Hallam09/04/2025September 4, 2025

A non-binding opinion, issued ahead of a full case at the European Court of Justice, recommends that EU member states should be obliged to issue ID cards corresponding with a trans person’s “lived gender identity.”

Source: https://www.dw.com/en/bulgaria-asked-to-recognize-trans-lived-gender-identity/a-73880461

Document: https://curia.europa.eu/juris/document/document.jsf;jsessionid=2DFCCAC23068A7F41CE0B6B7B4C6D942?text=&docid=303888&pageIndex=0&doclang=EN&mode=req&dir=&occ=first&part=1&cid=17544757

Imane Khelif ‘has right to appeal’ [before the Court of Arbitration for Sports] over genetic sex tests but will miss world championships

Imane Khelif ‘has right to appeal’ [before the Court of Arbitration for Sports] over genetic sex tests but will miss world championships

  • Olympic boxing body stands firm over new testing rules
  • Gold medalist has appealed to Cas over eligibility bar

More:

https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2025/sep/03/imane-khelif-has-right-to-appeal-over-gender-tests-but-will-miss-world-championships#:~:text=On%20Tuesday%2C%20Khelif%20appealed%20to,of%20her%20appeal%20on%20Wednesday.

Burkina Faso passes law outlawing homosexual practices

Burkina Faso passes law outlawing homosexual practices

John Silk AP, AFP, Reuters, dpa, KNA09/02/2025September 2, 2025

Burkina Faso’s parliament has passed a law banning homosexuality with offenders facing two to five years in prison. The amended family code was approved in a unanimous vote in the West African country.

Source: https://www.dw.com/en/burkina-faso-passes-law-outlawing-homosexual-practices/a-73855503

X enabled online abuse against LGBTQ+ community in Poland, report finds

X enabled online abuse against LGBTQ+ community in Poland, report finds

Amnesty International on Monday released a report finding that X (formerly Twitter) allowed for the spread of technology-facilitated gender-based violence (TfGBV) against LGBTQ+ people in Poland.

The report highlights that Elon Musk relaxed the X’s Community Guidelines regarding the content allowed on the platform after taking ownership. Consequently, X has become “awash with content constituting TfGBV” requiring “urgent, wide-ranging reforms”. Alia Al Ghussain, Amnesty International Researcher and Advisor on technology and human rights, highlighted that “through inadequate content moderation practices and a lack of human rights due diligence, X has contributed to human abuses against members of Poland’s LGBTI community.”

Amnesty International’s research found that the examination of the tweets unveiled that “homophobic and transphobic content is highly prevalent on X, particularly for accounts that follow politicians who do not support the rights of LGBTI people.” Importantly, the algorithm responsible for the “For You” feed (also known as the recommender system) aims to increase user engagement. Therefore, content that is likely to garner interaction will be displayed to users. Amnesty International classified X’s business model as “surveillance-based” because it is dependent on intrusive data collection so that advertisements reach the target audience, similar to other social media platforms.

The group notes that X’s lack of funding in Polish language content moderation has led to the failure of handling TfGBV content. Only two Polish-speaking content moderators are “responsible for covering a population of 37.45 million people and 5.33 million X users.” The report states that “the combination of poor resourcing, policy, and practice has contributed to X becoming a platform awash with hateful content” against the LGBTQ+ community.

Furthermore, Amnesty International argues that X has not complied with the European Union’s Digital Services Act (DSA). Article 34(1) of the DSA states that providers of Very Large Online Platforms (VLOPs) must “diligently identify, analyse and assess any systemic risks in the [EU] stemming from the design or functioning of their service and its related systems, including algorithmic systems, or from the use made of their services.”

Article 34(1)(b) highlights that the risk assessment must regard whether there are systemic human rights risks by considering whether any fundamental rights, as enshrined by the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (CFREU), are at risk. This includes the right to human dignity (Article 1 CFREU), right to respect for private and family life (Article 7 CFREU), right to the freedom of expression and information, including the freedom and pluralism of the media (Article 11 CFREU), and non-discrimination (Article 21 CFREU). The organization emphasizes that X has harmed the ability of LGBTQ+ individuals “to freely express themselves, to live free from discrimination and to feel safe in Polish society”.

Previously, the European Commission launched an investigation under the DSA against X in December 2023 and required X to give information on its recommender system in January 2025. Amnesty International states that the European Commission’s investigations should include X’s ability to effectively tackle the risk of TfGBV.

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DROITS DES ATHLÈTES ET CEDH – L’arrêt de Grande Chambre Semenya c. Suisse, GRANDE CONFÉRENCE CEDIDAC, Lausanne 9 octobre 2025

GRANDE CONFÉRENCE CEDIDAC: DROITS DES ATHLÈTES ET CEDH – L’arrêt de Grande Chambre Semenya c. Suisse, Lausanne 9 octobre 2025


ANDREAS ZÜND, JUGE À LA COUR EUROPÉENNE DES DROITS DE L’HOMME
DANIEL RIETIKER, CHEF D’UNITÉ À LA COUR EUROPÉENNE DES DROITS DE L’HOMME