Italy Constitutional Court says that world news is entitled to non-science mother paternity leave in the Uniform Sex Union

Rome: The Constitutional Court of Italy has ruled that the same-sex mother deserves paternity leave in the same-sex union, equals her role with her father and hence deserves bonding time with a newborn. The court on Monday found that a 2001 decree on the parents’ leave was unconstitutional as it did not believe that non-living mother in the Gay Citizen Association also deserved Italy’s compulsory 10-day paternity leave. The court argued that the child’s interest in having time with both parents, and parents, was not dependent on their sexual orientation. This is a second decision in several months by LGBTQ+ activists, which is amidst efforts by the premiere Georgia Meloni’s far-flung government to crack the surrogacy and promote traditional family values. In May, the Constitutional Court ruled that two women may be registered as a child’s parents on the birth certificate, saying that the recognition of parents’ rights cannot be limited to biological mother in families with equal-lingu. Italy has strong restrictions on IVF and have banned surrogacy since 2004. Last year, under the Meloni government, the country expanded the ban to criminalize Italians, which go abroad to have children through surrogacy. Monday addresses women going abroad for IVF remedies purchased by ruling women on Monday. With the May verdict, the Association Pro Life and Family criticized the court’s verdict as a “ridiculous”, citing how the social and legal order of Italy was being affected, citing this about “gender madness” and as evidence. Legislative Alesandro Zan, who has long been pushed for more and more LGBTQ+ rights in Italy, praised the decision as a historic end for “unjust and cruel discrimination”. “Justice reminds the government of a simple principle: Prem is the family, and every boy and girl are entitled to the care and protection of both parents, without discrimination,” he said in a social media post.