INFERTILITY
Infertility is considered a serious condition because it could lead to psychological distress, marital problems, and
even marital failure. At the ummatic level widespread infertility could spell demographic
weakness, a security threat. Causes of infertility may be natural, related to lifestyle, or complications of medical or surgical
procedures. Traditional methods of treating male and female infertility may be medical or surgical. Treatment of infertility
fulfils the purpose of hifdh al nasl
IN VIVO INSEMINATION, al talqiih al istinaa’e al daakhilii
Artificial intra-uterine insemination with husband’s sperm, talqiih sina’i dhaati is permitted by
the Law provided safeguards are taken to ensure that spermatozoa do not get mixed up in the laboratory or the clinic. The
Law prohibits artificial in vivo insemination of a wife with donated sperm from a strange man or in vivo insemination of a
strange woman with the husband’s sperm, talqiih sinna’i ajnabi.
IN VITRO FERTILIZATION, al talqiih al istinaa’e al khaariji
The Law permits in vitro fertilization if the sperm and ovum are from legally
wedded husband and wife and the zygote is implanted in the same wife. According to some jurists the Law permits in vitro fertilization
if the sperm is from a husband and the ovum is from a legally wedded wife, and the zygote is implanted in a second wife of
the husband. In vitro fertilization is prohibited if the sperm is from the husband and the ovum is from the wife and the zygote
is implanted in a surrogate mother. A married woman cannot have a zygote implanted into her uterus if a sperm from a donor
who is not her husband fertilized it. Sperm banks are a form of zina are not allowed.
The Law prohibits implantation of a fertilized zygote in a wife if another woman donated the ovum and the sperm is from her
husband or a strange man
ALTERNATIVES TO IVF
Legal rulings are being formulated on other forms of assisted reproduction such as gamete intra-fallopian transfer,
intra-cytoplasmic sperm injection, and futuristic technologies such as animal uterus, artificial uterus, male pregnancy, and
embryo transfer. In general shari’at rulings are not promulgated for hypothetical situations that have not yet become
widespread. The following alternatives to assisted reproduction can be considered: foster care, polygamy, open adoption, patience
and ‘ibadat.
ETHICAL AND LEGAL ISSUE
Several ethical issues arise in assisted reproduction: disclosure of infertility before marriage, artificial insemination
after death of the husband, legality of masturbation for obtaining sperms, paternity and maternity of children born of illegal
procedures, disposal and use of unused fertilized ova, sex selection and selective fetal reduction, embryo splitting, developing
embryos for purposes other than their use in assisted reproduction, using embryos
to produce a clone, using fetal gametes for fertilization, trans-species fertilization (mixing human and animal gametes),
mixing of gametes or embryos of different parentage to confuse biological parentage, implanting the embryo in a non-human
species uterus, replacing the nucleus of the embryo, embryo flushing, commercial trading in sperms, gametes, or embryos, and
use of gametes from cadavers