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Paving the way for an Organ Transplant Law in India |
At a seminar in Teheran, Iran’s former President, Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, urged the Iranian Parliament to pass a legislation to allow organ transplants from brain dead individuals. He said that Islam does not oppose the transplant of body parts of dead people. He added that the late revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and other senior clerics had issued fatwas or religious decrees approving the procedure. However, the Iranian Parliament in 1993 rejected a law allowing the transplantation of organs from dead people, a procedure opposed by some orthodox Shi’ite Muslim Clerics. But the good news is that the seminar in a closing statement said that “ the practice should be publicly supported and promoted by religious leaders to help educate the public to donate organs for transplant”.
How to cite this article: - Shroff S, Navin S. Paving the way for an Organ Transplant Law in India. Indian Transplant Newsletter Vol. I Issue NO.: 2 (February 1999)
How to cite this URL: - Shroff S, Navin S. Paving the way for an Organ Transplant Law in India. Indian Transplant Newsletter Vol. I Issue NO.: 2 (February 1999). Available at: https://www.itnnews.co.in/indian-transplant-newsletter/issue2/PAVING-THE-WAY-FOR-AN-ORGAN-TRANSPLANT-LAW-IN-IRAN-710.htm |