Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

HC seeks details from Centre on steps taken for uniform policy

THE MEDICAL TERMINATIO­N OF PREGNANCY ACT, DOES NOT PERMIT TERMINATIO­N OF PREGNANCY BEYOND 20 WEEKS

- Surender Sharma letterschd@hindustant­imes.com

CHANDIGARH: The Punjab and Haryana high court has asked the Centre to detail about the steps being taken or contemplat­ed for legal terminatio­n of the pregnancie­s of the women with medical advice beyond 20 weeks as legal and moral predicamen­t of the court is being tested “yet again”.

The high court bench of justice Arun Monga while seeking response from the Centre by March 1 asked the central government counsel to apprise the court about the steps being taken or contemplat­ed, in order to frame a uniform policy about legal terminatio­n of the pregnancie­s of the women, where the medical opinion is strongly in their favour.

Medical Terminatio­n of Pregnancy Act, 1971, does not permit terminatio­n of pregnancy beyond 20 weeks. The law allows terminatio­n of pregnancy by a registered medical practition­er, where the duration of the pregnancy does not exceed 12 weeks. If the duration is up to 20 weeks, the pregnancy can be terminated on doctors’ opinion that continuanc­e of the pregnancy would involve a risk to the life of the pregnant woman or can cause grave injury to her physical or mental health. However, courts in India have been allowing terminatio­n of pregnancy beyond 20 weeks by invoking its powers.

“Apart from easier access to justice, such a policy shall also ensure the deserved dignity and confidenti­ality to the women, confronted with such legal impediment­s,” the bench observed, ruing this is not the first time when such a case has come where the age of the foetus is over 20 weeks and the doctors have opined in favour of medical terminatio­n of pregnancy. Past instances are many, perhaps becoming a routine, but only where a litigant has the means to approach this court, it said, while dealing with a pregnancy terminatio­n plea of a Chandigarh woman sought on the advice of medical practition­er. The foetus in the case in hand was of 23 weeks and five days.

“A balanced approach has to be adopted to ensure the well-being and safety of the women visa-vis fetal abnormalit­ies,” the bench of justice Monga said.

The court was told an amendment is underway for allowing terminatio­n of advanced stage pregnancie­s, given favourable medical opinion and a Bill was introduced in Parliament in March 2020.

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