The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Politician­s unite in call over Northern Ireland abortion law

- RYAN WILKINSON

More than 170 politician­s from across the spectrum in the UK and Ireland have called on the British Government to reform Northern Ireland’s abortion laws.

The group, including Conservati­ve, Labour and Lib Dem MPs and peers, Stormont Assembly members and Irish TDs and senators, said it is a matter of protecting women’s human rights and honouring the Good Friday Agreement.

According to the group, nearly 1,000 women and girls were forced to travel to Britain for safe terminatio­ns in 2017, while others had to take illegal abortion drugs at home.

Calls for Northern Ireland’s abortion laws to be reformed have intensifie­d after a referendum in the Republic of Ireland backed liberalisi­ng legislatio­n south of the border.

Downing Street has previously said abortion law is a devolved issue, however the absence of a powershari­ng agreement at Stormont has placed pressure on Westminste­r to act.

Prime Minister Theresa May’s allies in the DUP, on whom she relies for her Commons majority, are staunchly opposed to relaxing abortion laws.

In a letter to The Sunday Times, the group has urged the UK Government to repeal sections 58 and 59 of the Offences Against the Person Act 1861 that makes it a crime for a woman to cause her own abortion in Northern Ireland.

They wrote: “This is the first and critical step to ending the treatment of British and Irish women living in Northern Ireland as second-class citizens, who do not enjoy the same access to healthcare as their counterpar­ts do across these islands.

“We therefore call for our respective government­s to act to ensure that the spirit of the Good Friday Agreement is upheld and the human rights of the women living in Northern Ireland are respected.”

Labour deputy leader Tom Watson, Lib Dem deputy Jo Swinson and Home Affairs Select Committee chairwoman Yvette Cooper gave cross-party support to the call.

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