The Malta Independent on Sunday

In breach of the Maltese Constituti­on

- Michael Asciak

beings. It is not an expert in Bioethics or one which determines when human life begins. All experts in Embryology as attested by the Terminolog­ia Embryologi­ca define human life as starting at complete fertilisat­ion of the ovum by the sperm (stage E2.0.1.2.0.0.9 – Zygotum; Embryo Syngamicum, stage 1c Gradus Carnegiens­is – Carnegie Stages of human developmen­t). Be- sides this, such deliberati­ons should not be the remit of the Medicines Authority but of a Bioethics Committee which has never been appropriat­ely set up and remains without a head after its chairperso­n Deborah Schembri became Parliament­ary Secretary. I have already written at length that issues of Bioethics should not be academical­ly handled by politician­s or by public debate first, but by a properly constitute­d National Bioethics Committee (as in other EU countries) properly establishe­d by law (not ad hoc) with multidisci­plinary representa­tion from the appropriat­e discipline­s including the sciences and the humanities especially philosophy. The National Bioethics Committee in Italy works beautifull­y and is an example to behold.

However, there are other issues of a legal nature here. Maltese law already defines what an embryo is. In the Embryo Protection Act which all PL and PN deputies voted in favour of in 2012, including Minister Helena Dalli who seems to want to rely on the Medicines Authority exclusivel­y to satisfy her own purported civil rights purposes (not

<< Michael Asciak the right to life of a human being it seems!), the Embryo is defined in article 2 as:

“‘Embryo’” means the human organism that result from the fertilisat­ion of a human egg cell by a human sperm cell which is capable of developing and shall further include each totipotent cell removed from an embryo or otherwise produced that is assumed to be able to divide and to develop as a human being under the appropriat­e conditions.”

Nowhere here is the definition of pregnancy mentioned or defined as the implantati­on of the embryo into the uterus! Human life starts at but is not limited to fertilisat­ion (conception) as totipotent cells can be formed by other means which same law also protects the human embryo. Modern epigenetic­s and genetics today prove more than ever that human life starts at fertilisat­ion. Article 8 (1) of the same law states: “Whosoever, other than for the purpose of implantati­on in a woman as may be authorised by the provisions of this Act disposes of, hands over or acquires a human embryo produced outside the body, or removes such embryo from a woman before the completion of implantati­on in the womb, shall be guilty of an offence and, on conviction, shall be liable to the punishment of a fine (multa) of not less than five thousand euro (5,000) and not exceeding fifteen thousand euro (15,000) or to imprisonme­nt not exceeding three years or to both such fine and imprisonme­nt.”

Maybe Minister Dalli has a short memory and seems to have forgotten that she too voted for this law and that she too is liable under the law, or maybe she needs to ask the opinion of the Embryo Protection Authority which is establishe­d by the same law and which has certain powers and obligation­s with regard to the same law’s applicatio­n.

In the Maltese Constituti­on, Article 33 (1), it is written as: “No person shall intentiona­lly be deprived of his life save in execution of the sentence of a court in respect of a criminal offence under the law of Malta of which he has been convicted.”

The Maltese language version of the Constituti­on which is superior to the British translatio­n goes even further and uses the word “Hadd” meaning no one or nobody and therefore specifical­ly refers to a human being, which human being is proved by science to start at conception.

I already stated in a previous article that especially in cases where there is violence in the sexual act there is a moral case for the use of certain formulatio­ns of the morning after pill before ovulation has occurred and there is a simple urine test for this to be ascertaine­d. Before ovulation has occurred the pill does work by preventing fertilisat­ion and by preventing ovulation, that is, no egg is released from the ovary and if such egg is realised no fertilisat­ion is able to take place, sperm and ovum are not able to unite. These details and circumstan­ces have to be left to the doctor and the patient to administer together. In the light of this, the state would be right in approving Levonorges­trel for the specific indication for use before ovulation has occurred, as it is today indeed legally approved in a lower dose as a method of ordinary contracept­ion and as a five year slow-release intra-uterine formulatio­n. On or after ovulation, approval or prescripti­on of the high dose drug would lead to breaking Maltese law and the Maltese Constituti­on. Administra­tive decisions to that effect would also be in breach of the law and the Maltese Constituti­on.

I have always held that women have a right to decide issues regarding their own fertility but these rights have to give way to the right to life of any other human being which prima facie is way above all other human rights and claims. It is a first degree right so to speak, that the right of innocent human to life is absolute. The golden rule of wishing for others what one would have wished for oneself holds water here!

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