Daily Mail

Belief in the sanctity of life shouldn’t make you a target of hate

- by Anne Atkins

Democracy in action – so said the Irish prime minister, Leo Varadkar, summing up Ireland’s landslide referendum on Saturday. Which was exactly how I reacted. I am passionate about democracy and willingly embrace democratic decisions – even if, like Saturday’s result, they’re ones I might not have voted for myself.

and yet there was just the tiniest of niggles. a small part of me said, it’s not entirely democratic – is it? Not everybody gets a vote. Strictly speaking after all, there is a voice that’s been lost among all the rather distastefu­l triumphali­sm of the winning side, and one that for many it’s easier not to think about: the voice of the children who now will never be born.

my own opinions on abortion are not entirely black and white.

I remember, in my 20s, watching in horror the 1984 film The Silent Scream, which showed a terminatio­n in graphic detail. That a foetus is human, and living, seems to me undeniable. my christian faith convinces me that we owe everyone, particular­ly the vulnerable, rights and protection in any civilised society. and yet in 2016, the last time statistics were taken, 185,824 abortions were carried out on women in england and Wales. almost four in ten terminatio­ns are now carried out on women who have undergone the procedure before, while 50 women had each had eight terminatio­ns. That represents a lot of children who will never be born – with many more to be added when this law comes to pass.

But while I am pro-life, I have also experience­d the visceral terror of a pregnancy I didn’t believe I could cope with: two of our three eldest have recognised disabiliti­es, and when I was pregnant with our fifth, two scans suggested our child was likely to have Down’s syndrome. So I know what it’s like to be terrified of my own pregnancy, and I don’t believe I could ever condemn another woman for such a hard choice.

What is undeniable however is that in this debate, those who find themselves on the ‘wrong’ side can discover that their voices simply aren’t allowed to be heard – that they can be shouted down and their legitimate and compassion­ate concerns dismissed as women-hating, bigoted or uncaring.

The pro- choice arguments are always – initially, anyway – based on the (tiny minority) of hard cases: victims of rape or child abuse; those carrying foetuses that will never come to term.

We all know the other side of the story however; that abortion can be, for some, a lifestyle choice: nothing more than a contracept­ive option.

Indeed, just last year the head of one of the UK’s biggest abortion organisati­ons said abortion should be regarded as no more than another form of birth control. Terminatio­n of a pregnancy should not be seen as exceptiona­l but merely as ‘birth control that women need when their regular method lets them down’, ann Furedi of the British Pregnancy advisory Service said.

It’s this euphemisti­c disregard for a life that is so disturbing – as if it were no more complex an issue than having a tooth removed.

The fact is that abortion is increasing­ly seen as a commonplac­e procedure, with clinics rubber- stamping applicatio­ns, no questions asked.

What has been lost from the debate in this country and Ireland is that abortion isn’t the only option for an unwanted pregnancy.

a few weeks ago I visited ealing, west London, to interview clients, passers-by and members of the prolife group Good counsel Network outside the marie Stopes clinic, prior to ealing council’s vote banning demonstrat­ors from outside.

I was deeply impressed by what I found. I couldn’t help concluding that the pro-life demonstrat­ors – a group of committed christians – represente­d the first time many of these vulnerable women were offered a genuine choice: an alternativ­e to abortion.

They were not protesting, far less harassing and not even attempting to change minds. They were simply handing out informatio­n. The informatio­n they offer is that an alternativ­e exists for women who would prefer to keep their babies. That women who fear eviction, or loss of employment; whose partners have threatened to leave, or worse, report them for illegal immigratio­n; that those who have assumed they have no choice but abortion, can be given help, support, accommodat­ion, food and clothes in order to keep their babies if they prefer.

you’d think no one could object to this, right? Wrong. This offer of actual real-life choice prompts fury from the supposedly pro-choice campaigner­s.

So I can’t help wondering how democratic this change will actually prove to be. For instance, as soon as the result was known, the talk was all about putting pressure on Northern Ireland. excuse me? how is that democratic?

So I fear not just the loss of unborn life. But also the loss of free speech, particular­ly from those saying abortion isn’t necessaril­y the only option.

and that, for me, is a loss of genuine choice.

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