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Italy recognises three parents for child in landmark court ruling

By Thomson Reuters May 12, 2026 | 11:17 AM

ROME, May 12 (Reuters) – An Italian court decision has granted a 4-year-old child three legally recognised parents – two fathers and one mother – in a landmark ruling ​that has angered conservative Catholics.

The decision was reported ‌on Tuesday by several Italian media outlets and confirmed by Pasqua Manfredi, the lawyer of one of the boy’s fathers.

The child was born in Germany and lives there with two men who are married, ‌one ​of whom is the biological parent, ⁠who fathered him with ⁠a woman who is a friend of the couple.

The non-biological father, who is Italo-German, then adopted the child under German law, but he applied for that adoption ​to also be recognised in Italy.

A local authority rejected the request, suspecting that the child was born from surrogacy ⁠carried out abroad – a practice ⁠that Italy’s conservative government has criminalised.

A court ​of appeal in the southern Italian city of Bari overturned the ​decision, accepting that there were no surrogacy arrangements ‌in the family.

The ruling, which is final, means that Italy, like Germany, accepts that the child has two legally recognised fathers, and one mother.

“There was no secret surrogacy deal ⁠here, this is a case of three people who all want to be the parents of this child, and the court ⁠recognised this,” Manfredi ‌told Reuters.

The ruling is from January, but ⁠it was publicised as Italy marked the ​10th ‌anniversary since parliament voted to legalise same-sex ​partnerships.

Pro Vita & Famiglia, ⁠a Catholic group that campaigns for what it calls traditional family values, condemned the ruling and said legal recognition of same-sex unions had “upended family law, exposing minors to all kinds of social and ideological experimentations”.

(Reporting by Alvise Armellini; Editing ​by Alison Williams)