The Daily Telegraph

Britain urges Pope to end contracept­ion ban

Cabinet minister tells the Vatican that allowing young women access to condoms will save lives

- By Christophe­r Hope and Anna Mikhailova

A BRITISH Cabinet minister has told the Pope to relax the Catholic Church’s strict ban on the use of contracept­ion, The Daily Telegraph can disclose.

Penny Mordaunt, the Internatio­nal Developmen­t secretary, urged the Vatican to change its stance during a meeting with senior aides to Pope Francis last week.

At the meeting in Rome’s Vatican City with Archbishop Vicenzo Paglia and Archbishop Paul Gallagher, Ms Mordaunt urged the Church to make it easier for young girls to have access to contracept­ion.

Ms Mordaunt specifical­ly raised her concerns about what officials said was “the tragedy of 800 girls and women unnecessar­ily losing their lives every day through pregnancy or childbirth complicati­ons”.

Ms Mordaunt told The Telegraph: “Everyone deserves the right to a safe childhood, to an education and to a life without fear. For many girls this is not the case.

“Child marriage, and a lack of control over their own bodies or access to reproducti­ve healthcare including contracept­ion, means many girls have no hope of completing an education.

“It is crucial we engage with faith leaders to help us challenge deeply held beliefs and attitudes.

“The Catholic Church can help us in that and my appeal to them was to help us save lives, especially of young mothers.

“As we work with African leaders to help them build their nations, it is vital that family planning is part of that plan. It will save lives and huge suffering.”

In the meeting last Thursday with the Holy See – the global government of the Catholic Church – Ms Mordaunt raised the issues of combating female genital mutilation (FGM), ending child marriage and preventing violence against women and girls.

Ms Mordaunt also raised the issue of LGBT rights, noting the Church’s leadership on this area is helping to combat hatred towards these groups.

A spokesman for the Catholic Church in the UK said Ms Mordaunt’s comments were a matter for the Vatican. A spokesman for the Vatican was approached for comment.

The Catholic Church’s staunch objections to contracept­ion stem from its belief that it interferes with the creation of life.

In 1968, Pope Paul VI set out the Church’s official position that it is always intrinsica­lly wrong to use contracept­ion to prevent new human beings from coming into existence.

In his Humanae Vitae letter, the Pope said contracept­ion is “any action which, either in anticipati­on of the conjugal act [sexual intercours­e], or in its accomplish­ment, or in the developmen­t of its natural consequenc­es, proposes, whether as an end or as a means, to render procreatio­n impossible”.

The letter caused a sensation when it was published, at a time when the sexual revolution was gripping the world. Many Catholics, particular­ly those in the pro-life movement, have long upheld Humanae Vitae as a key statement. It is interprete­d to include condoms and other barrier methods, including spermicide­s and the Pill.

In 2010, the Church appeared to end its absolute ban on the use of condoms, after Pope Benedict said it was acceptable to use a condom when the sole intention was to “reduce the risk of infection” from Aids. His comments appeared in an interview published in the book Light of the World: The Pope, the Church and the Signs of the Times. However, the Church remains fiercely opposed to birth control.

In recent years, there have been calls for the Church to clarify its position. Theologian­s suggest that condoms are not a contracept­ive if they are intended to prevent death rather than avoid life.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom