Difference between revisions of "Turkmenistan"
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|Sex selection=? | |Sex selection=? | ||
|Surrogacy=PROHIBITED | |Surrogacy=PROHIBITED | ||
| + | |European Union= | ||
| + | |Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development= | ||
| + | |Council of Europe= | ||
|1997 COE Biomedicine Convention=n/a | |1997 COE Biomedicine Convention=n/a | ||
|1998 COE Cloning Convention=n/a | |1998 COE Cloning Convention=n/a | ||
|2005 UN Cloning Vote=no vote | |2005 UN Cloning Vote=no vote | ||
| + | |2005 UNESCO Sports Doping Convention= | ||
|Treaty of Lisbon=n/a | |Treaty of Lisbon=n/a | ||
| + | |Introduction= | ||
| + | |Key laws and policies='''Assisted Reproduction''' | ||
| + | |||
| + | * In Turkmenistan, there are no any specific laws on ART. | ||
| + | * However, assisted reproduction to some extent is regulated by various laws—i.e. Family Code, Health law, and directives of Health ministries—leaving some “gray” areas. (For instance, egg/sperm/embryo donation, as well as genetic material storage, are not covered by law.) | ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | '''Surrogacy''' | ||
| + | |||
| + | * Surrogacy is considered human trafficking. | ||
| + | |Foundational values= | ||
| + | |Prohibited practices= | ||
| + | |Permitted and regulated practices= | ||
| + | |Regulatory activities= | ||
| + | |Accountability and governance= | ||
| + | |History= | ||
| + | |External links=See www.jurconsult.ru/data/ConfLRM2011.ppt. | ||
}} | }} | ||
Latest revision as of 15:01, 16 July 2015
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