Twins
separated at birth met and married
Fri
Jan 11, 2008 3:50pm EST
LONDON
(Reuters) - A couple discovered after they had married that they were twins who
had been split up at birth and adopted by separate families, according to a member
of Britain's House of Lords.
British
peer David Alton recounted the story to parliament last month to support his argument
that artificially conceived children should be told who their biological parents
are.
Alton
said he had heard the story of the separated twins from a High Court judge who
had dealt with the case.
"This
did not involve in vitro fertilization: It involved the normal birth of twins
who were separated at birth and adopted by separate parents," said Alton,
an independent member of the Lords. "They were never told that they were
twins."
"They
met later in life and felt an inevitable attraction, and the judge had to deal
with the consequences of the marriage that they entered into and all the issues
of their separation," he said.
"I
suspect that it will be a matter of litigation in the future if we do not make
information of this kind available to children who have been donor-conceived,"
he said.
Alton
could not immediately be reached for comment and no further information was available
about the twins or where they were from.
"I
think it's a very tragic story for the people involved," said Pam Hodgkins,
head of a group that helps adults affected by adoption.
"It
is a lesson that we need to learn and apply to the situation of donor-conceived
children," she told Sky News.
"Whilst
... nowadays it would be most unusual for siblings to be separated ... the risk
of secrecy affecting the lives of people born as a result of egg and sperm donation
is exactly the same as the risks that have affected adopted people in the past,"
she said.
(Reporting
by Adrian Croft; Editing by Stephen Addison)