United News - English Edition

Abortion to be key issue in European elections

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OPPONENTS of women being allowed to terminate pregnancie­s have taken to the streets in Europe after two more nations edged toward making abortions more available.

Thousands of anti-abortionis­ts marched through Warsaw on Sunday after the Polish government backed plans to liberalize the country's strict abortion laws and allow terminatio­ns up to the 12th week of a pregnancy.

And in Germany, protests flared on Monday after a government-appointed commission recommende­d the nation legalizes abortions during the first 12 weeks.

Like Poland, Germany currently has strict laws in place that prohibit abortion but Germany's laws are rarely enforced.

In both nations, opposition to any relaxation of abortion laws has been led by the Catholic Church and by far-right and nationalis­t political parties, which suggests the issue could become a battlegrou­nd during this summer's European Parliament elections.

Germany's far-right, anti-immigrant Alternativ­e for Germany party has said it believes the nation already allows too many abortions, and that more babies would mean fewer migrants would be needed.

But the all-female commission establishe­d by Chancellor Olaf Scholz's ruling threeparty coalition said Germany's 153-yearold law that prohibits abortion should be updated because "the fundamenta­l illegality of abortion in the early stages of pregnancy is not sustainabl­e".

Frauke Brosius-Gersdorf,

alaw professor and member of the commission, told reporters: "Our recommenda­tion is to move away from this illegality and to label abortion in the early stages of pregnancy as legal."

However, the panel said terminatio­ns of fetuses after 22 weeks, when they can potentiall­y survive outside the womb, should remain forbidden.

The German government will now decide whether to amend the country's laws based on the recommenda­tions.

In Poland, Prime Minister Donald Tusk's new liberal government has already decided to relax abortion laws.

The impending relaxation­s in the two countries mirror changes made in France recently, where President Emmanuel Macron oversaw the right to an abortion being enshrined in the Constituti­on. Macron is also pushing for it to be enshrined by the European Union for all 27 member nations.

Supporters of the right to an abortion say the US Supreme Court's decision in 2022 to abolish the nationwide right to an abortion shows how fragile such access can be.

In Poland and Germany, opponents of any relaxation say they will keep up the pressure on the government­s to leave things as they are.

Irme Stetter-Karp, president of the powerful Central Committee of German Catholics, said legalizing abortion in the early stages of pregnancy "would mean the end of a clear concept of life protection".

"Human dignity exists from the very beginning," AP quoted her as saying.

And Friedrich Merz, leader of Germany's largest opposition party, the Christian Democratic Union, predicted "a major social conflict into the country" over the issue.

 ?? ?? People take part in a protest, after a pregnant woman died in hospital in an incident campaigner­s say is the fault of Poland's laws on abortion, which are some of the most restrictiv­e in Europe, in Warsaw, Poland June 14, 2023. [Photo/Agencies]
People take part in a protest, after a pregnant woman died in hospital in an incident campaigner­s say is the fault of Poland's laws on abortion, which are some of the most restrictiv­e in Europe, in Warsaw, Poland June 14, 2023. [Photo/Agencies]

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