Denmark seeks to ban sex with animals: minister
Denmark has been isolated after many of it's neighbours banned bestiality
Copenhagen: Denmark's government proposed a new law Sunday banning sex with animals, saying it needs to put a leash on bestiality so that the country doesn't become a zoophile hotspot.
The law would bring Denmark in line with restrictions in European countries including in neighbouring Germany, Norway and Sweden, said Agriculture, Food and Fisheries Minister Dan Jorgensen.
"I propose a change in the law on protection of animals to state explicitly that sexual relations with animals are no longer permitted," Jorgensen said in a statement."Animals have to be treated with respect and care and they have a right to special protection because they cannot say no."
Bestiality has been legal in the Nordic country except in cases where the animal can be proved to have suffered. However, laws across Europe, also including in Britain, France, Holland and Switzerland, have left Denmark isolated.
A recent Gallup poll revealed 76 per cent of Danes supported a ban on the legality of animal sex.