World Health Organisation demands end to ALL time limits on abortions
THE world’s most influential health organisation is calling on governments to scrap the legal time limit on abortion, The Irish Mail on Sunday can reveal.
New guidelines issued by the World Health Organization claim laws preventing abortion at any point during pregnancy risk violating the rights of ‘women, girls or other pregnant persons’.
The WHO’s Abortion Care Guideline published this month also recommends that governments:
■ Allow abortion under all circumstances – ruling out laws banning terminations because the foetus is the ‘wrong’ sex.
■ Stop women requiring approval from a doctor or nurse to have a
‘Emotional and symbolic value to an organ’
termination.
■ Roll out ‘pills by post’ schemes so women can be sent abortion medication after a phone call.
■ Curtail medical professionals’ rights to refuse to take part in abortions on conscience grounds.
The United Nations, which oversees the WHO, has welcomed the suggested removal of what it called ‘unnecessary policy barriers to safe abortion’, including ‘limits on when an abortion can take place’.
But nowhere in the 210-page document is there mention of the ethical debate about the rights of the unborn child, nor if abortions are morally acceptable when after 22-24 weeks the foetus has a good chance of surviving if born prematurely.
It is also silent on sex-selective abortion, despite the termination of female foetuses being common in countries such as India, Pakistan and China.
Prior to publication, the WHO consulted a panel of 12 ‘external experts’ including Dr Dhammika Perera, global medical director of UK-based Marie Stopes International, whose British arm carries out more than 60,000 NHS abortions a year, and Dr Laura Castleman, of Planned Parenthood Michigan, a branch of the largest abortion provider in the United States.
Dr Perera has previously described terms such as late-term abortion and foetal heartbeat as ‘anti-choice rhetoric’.
She also objects to the word ‘womb’ because it ‘assigns emotional and symbolic value to an organ’.
Another member of the panel was Karthik Srinivasan from the International Planned Parenthood Federation, which lobbies to expand abortion rights.
Christina Zampas, of the global Center for Reproductive Rights, which uses donations to ‘build, enforce, [and] defend’ abortion, advised on human rights law.
The WHO document recommends ‘full decriminalisation of abortion’ and the scrapping of laws and regulations that ‘prohibit abortion based on gestational limits’ and ‘restrict abortion’ on any grounds.
It says a review of 21 studies found that when women are denied later terminations it ‘can be viewed as incompatible with... international human rights law’.
It adds that time limits on abortion might also breach equality laws because they have a ‘disproportionate impact’ on some groups, such as teenagers and the poor.
In Ireland since 2018, abortion has been permitted during the first 12 weeks of pregnancy, and later in cases where the pregnant woman’s life or health is at risk, or in the cases of a fatal foetal abnormality.
Abortion pills, which can be obtained online, remain illegal in this country.
‘Incompatible with human rights law’
In 2020, according to Government figures,, 6,577 abortions were carried out in Ireland.
In England and Wales, women can have abortions for ‘social’ reasons up to 24 weeks. After that, they are only legally permitted in circumstances such as the mother’s life being at risk or if the child would be born with a severe disability.
The WHO did not respond to a request to comment.