An Egyptian TV presenter has been sentenced to three years in prison for discussing women having children outside wedlock on air.
Doaa Salah asked if her viewers had considered having sex before marriage.
The Al-Nahar TV presenter also suggested a woman could briefly marry to have children before divorcing her husband.
She also complained artificial insemination was not offered inEgypt.
Ms Salah was immediately suspended from her presenting job for three months after the broadcast.
She was later charged and convicted of outraging public decency.
Ashraf Naji, a lawyer, filed a lawsuit against Ms Salah after the programme aired in July and she was reportedly ordered to pay 10,000 Egyptian pounds in compensation (£430).
Authorities said the ideas touted by Ms Salah "threatened the fabric of Egyptian life", according to the EFE news agency.
Although it is not illegal to have a child outside marriage in Egypt, it is frowned on. Parents can find it difficult to register illegitimate children because of rules requiring them to prove the paternity of the child.
Critics say Egypt is growing increasingly conservative and in recent months the state has used vague morality laws to arrest 70 men and women accused of being gay.
Ms Salah's three-year prison sentence follows a verdict that is open to appeal.
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