(单词翻译:单击)
In East China's Jiangsu province, a local court has rejected a request by four parents’ to inherit frozen embryos1 that were left behind by a couple who died in a car crash.
Now for more on the issue, we are joined in the studio by Professor Hao Ran, deputy director of social law office of the institute of law at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
Q1: When you look at the case from a moral point of view or just simply common sense, many would argue that it shouldn’t be an issue to let the two families have the embryos. So why did the court rule otherwise, anything we’re missing here that practitioners2 of the law would see differently?
Q2: What do you think of the significance of the case beyond just the two families involved. Might this set any legal precedents3?