31 July, 2008

NI parties oppose abortion proposal

All four of Northern Ireland’s main political parties say they will vigorously oppose any attempt to make abortion legal in the Province.

Six MPs, none of whom are from Northern Ireland, have signed an amendment seeking to change the law so that the 1967 Abortion Act would apply in the Province.

One of them, Labour MP Diane Abbott, said: “We think we have got a very good chance of getting the amendment through.

“There is a very clear majority in Parliament for a woman’s right to choose and we believe there is a majority to extend that to Northern Ireland.”

But MPs from the DUP, UUP, SDLP and Sinn Fein have all voiced their opposition to the move.

DUP MP David Simpson pointed out the shocking number of abortions that take place among teenage girls in Great Britain each year.

He said: “Every MP in the House of Commons knows full well that if it were up to local politicians and local people this would not take place.

“I and my party will fight such an attempt all the way through the House if necessary.”

European challenge to Ireland's abortion ban

Three women are asking the European Court of Human Rights to overturn the Republic of Ireland’s ban on abortion.

Their case hinges on articles in the European Convention on Human Rights on discrimination and the right to life and health.

The women - who have all faced medical complications because of their pregnancies - claim that their inability to have an abortion damaged their health.

One of the women had run the risk of ectopic pregnancy; another had received chemotherapy for cancer; the third had other children placed in care because she was unable to cope.

Abortion is only allowed in the Republic of Ireland when the mother’s life is at risk.

The three women are being supported by the pro-abortion group, the Irish Family Planning Association (IFPA), which campaigns for legal abortion in the Republic.

Pro-life groups in the Republic of Ireland say that a constitutional change would be needed to overturn the current law on abortion.

The constitution currently states: “The State acknowledges the right to life of the unborn and, with due regard to the equal right to life of the mother, guarantees in its laws to respect and, as far as practicable, by its laws to defend and vindicate that right.”

Simon Calvert, of The Christian Institute, said: “Any attempt to lift the ban on abortion in the Republic of Ireland would be totally incompatible with its cultural and religious character.

“This is a country with a strong commitment to the sanctity of life. The European Court of Human Rights must not impose secular values on countries which do not want them.”