A VEGETARIAN couple on the Greek  island of Crete has been barred from adopting a child because of doubts  about their diet, a local social welfare official said today.                    
The decision was taken because the would-be adoptive parents, who  have gone to court to overturn it, eat no meat or fish and officials  feared this regimen would be applied to the child as well.
"We  asked the University of Crete medical school on the issue and they said  the child's diet must include meat, fish, etc," the head of the city's  welfare services, Spyros Epitropakis, said.
"We do not  discriminate but we were obliged to check this out. The issue is now in  the hands of the judicial authorities," he said.
The university  expert whose recommendation was used by the welfare services to reject  the application has labeled the affair "unreasonable."
"It's unreasonable not to be given the child for being  vegetarian," said Antonis Kafatos, a pediatrician and nutrition  researcher.
"A child needs to eat fish, seafood and dairy  products among other things, without meat being essential. But if the  family has no intention of imposing its diet habits on the child, I  don't see where the problem is," he said.
The case is to be examined on March 16.
Greece  has one of the lowest birth rates in the European Union. Strict  procedures covering adoption in the country often force couples to seek  other options, such as adopting children sold by migrant gangs.   
 
  
 
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