BELFAST (AFP) -
The
prosecution of women in Northern Ireland over abortion has become a key
campaign issue ahead of regional elections on Thursday, with
unprecedented political support for reforming the law.
A
21-year-old woman was prosecuted earlier this year for taking pills to
induce a miscarriage, while a mother has been charged after ordering
medication over the Internet to help her daughter end an unwanted
pregnancy.
The prosecutions have fuelled a campaign against one of
Europe's most stringent abortion laws and a backlash by anti-abortion
campaigners and the Catholic Church who have urged voters to boycott
candidates favouring reform.
"I am not coming at this from an
ideological viewpoint but as someone who lives in the real world," Ruth
Patterson, an independent unionist candidate in the South Belfast
constituency.
Patterson is one of a number of candidates calling
for an extension of a more liberal abortion law covering the rest of the
United Kingdom to Northern Ireland.
Northern Ireland currently bans abortion in all cases except when the life of the mother is in danger.
More
socially conservative than most parts of mainland Britain, it never
adopted the laws on the issue governing the rest of the UK which were
passed in 1967.
The only two European states with stricter laws --
total bans on abortion -- are Malta and the Vatican. Ireland also has
tough legislation banning abortion in the vast majority of cases.
- A 'backward' place -
Cracks in the status quo, however, are beginning to appear.
The
incumbent power-sharing administration in the UK province unites
historic foes the Democratic Unionists -- a mainly Protestant party
which wants Northern Ireland to stay in the UK -- and Sinn Fein,
Catholic republicans who want a united Ireland.
Unionists and
republicans were divided during three decades of sectarian unrest which
killed around 3,500 people and was largely ended by a 1998 peace deal.
The Democratic Unionists pointedly fail to mention abortion in their election manifesto.
Sinn Fein has pledged to legislate in favour of abortion in cases of fatal foetal abnormality, rape and incest.
Launching
Sinn Fein's manifesto this week, deputy first minister Martin
McGuinness, claimed rival parties had "run away" from the issue of
abortion.
McGuinness said there would be "no hiding place" in future, adding that he did not want to live in a "backward" place.
Pro-choice
groups have staged protests against the three-month sentence suspended
for two years given to the 21-year-old woman who aborted her foetus,
which spares her jail but means she now has a criminal record.
Anti-abortion groups are instead demanding a retrial, claiming that her sentence was too lenient.
The
case of the mother who procured abortion pills for her daughter and now
faces possible life imprisonment has been adjourned until later this
month.
Susan McKay, an author of several works on Northern Ireland
society and a former head of the National Women's Council of Ireland,
said the recent court cases will encourage politicians to reform.
"The
majority of people who were in favour of adopting reasonably liberal
abortion legislation in a recent poll will be horrified to see women
dragged through the courts in this way," she told AFP.
"Even Sinn
Fein will be uncomfortable because even what they are advocating is
fairly conservative and will not address cases such as we have seen
recently," she added.
- 'Thou shalt not kill' -
Catholic
bishops intervened directly in the debate last week in the form of a
statement urging people not to vote for abortion reform candidates.
"From a moral point of view, there is no such things as 'limited' abortion," they said.
"Abortion
is always the deliberate and intentional taking of an innocent,
vulnerable human life, and a direct breach of the commandment: 'Thou
shalt not kill'."
But the majority of Catholics are still expected to vote for Sinn Fein.
The
party will likely return to the devolved power-sharing administration
after the election and be in a position to put abortion reform on the
agenda of the next government.
In February, a motion on the issue
was defeated by lawmakers in the Northern Ireland Assembly but reformers
say it helped highlight the plight of women who face having to carry a
foetus to full term even if it has no chance of survival outside the
womb.
It also shone a spotlight on the issue of thousands of women
who travel to the British mainland every year to obtain legal
abortions.
Groups such as Amnesty International are intent on keeping up the pressure.
"Northern
Ireland?s abortion law must be changed to bring it into line with
international standards," said Patrick Corrigan, its Northern Ireland
director. "Abortion must be decriminalised."
by Douglas Dalby
© 2016 AFP
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