Townsville Bulletin

CHILDBIRTH OUR CHOICE

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IT IS less than 10 years since 19year- old Cairns woman Tegan Leach found herself in court charged under section 225 of Queensland’s Criminal Code for procuring her own miscarriag­e. Her partner, Sergie Brennan, was charged with assisting her. Yes, at trial, they were acquitted but the unarguable fact is abortion remains a crime in this state.

Why raise this now? Well, vanquished in the marriage equality battle, religious conservati­ves are massing on a new front. And so it came to pass that gun- toting, Christian soldier and Dawson MP George Christense­n showed up at the annual “march for life” rally in Brisbane last month, proselytis­ing against any effort by our evil state government to reform our abortion laws. The Queensland Law Reform Commission was tasked last year with “modernisin­g” and clarifying the state’s terminatio­n of pregnancy laws. Queensland and NSW are the only remaining jurisdicti­ons where abortion is a criminal offence.

The commission’s December consultati­on paper says there were 9926 terminatio­ns in private clinics and hospitals in 2016 and 492 in public hospitals, where most abortions involving foetal abnormalit­y or maternal illness take place. These numbers, derived from Medicare data, are, in fact, swelled by women who, having miscarried naturally, may require the same surgical procedure.

Importantl­y, terminatio­ns at 20 weeks or more gestation, which can only be performed at particular hospitals, numbered just 140 of the total 10,421 – just 1.3 per cent. And while the total hospital terminatio­ns do not include those achieved by taking the abortion pill, this medication is only prescribed up to nine weeks gestation.

The QLRC has until June 30 to present its final report.

Meanwhile, over in Ireland a hotly contested referendum is to be held in May on whether to remove the Eighth Amendment from that country’s Constituti­on. Inserted in 1983, the Eighth, which prohibits abortion in almost all cases including rape, incest and fatal foetal abnormalit­ies, was the outcome of an intense Catholic- powered campaign aimed at preventing the Irish courts from following internatio­nal precedent, specifical­ly the landmark Roe v Wade abortion case in the US. The Supreme Court of Ireland had, after all, shaken the Church to its core 12 years earlier by striking the first blow against the ban on contracept­ion. Just imagine being raped and impregnate­d by an abusive close relative and having no right to seek a simple, early terminatio­n where, if you do so and are prosecuted, you face 14 years jail. As a result, only about two dozen women a year have lawful abortions in Ireland, everyone else heads overseas.

But surely there’s no parallel between Ireland’s truly draconian margaret. wenham@ news. com. au anti- abortion laws and Queensland? Well, the fact remains that, for Queensland women, having an abortion is a crime also punishable by imprisonme­nt – up to seven years, while defences for medical profession­als rest, in part, on case law from the notorious 1986 Bayliss and Cullen trial wherein Judge McGuire warned of the “uncertaint­y” of present abortion laws.

I was around the same age as Tegan Leach when I had an early term abortion following an unplanned pregnancy. The decision was made after careful considerat­ion, including consultati­on with family planning counsellor­s and my mother. As it was in the days before the abortion pill – and before the Howard government in the 1990s and 2000s disgracefu­lly delayed its access here – I had a surgical procedure. I recovered quickly and had and have absolutely no regrets.

I was a fair bit older when I chose not to have an early term abortion following another unplanned pregnancy. By now I was a married mother of two but it happened at a time of great emotional upheaval and financial difficulty. In that instance, again after careful considerat­ion, I continued with the pregnancy.

I accept the right of those whose objections are guided by or grounded in their religious beliefs to reject the notion of pregnancy terminatio­n. To them I say, go forth and procreate and good luck to you. But do not seek to foist those beliefs on others who do not share them – so our right, in this instance, to make informed choices about our own health and circumstan­ces is not only denied but criminalis­ed.

Ours is a secular state. Reform to Queensland’s abortion laws is well past its due date.

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