Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Slovakia debates fetal-heartbeat measure

- MARIA CHENG

LONDON — Lawmakers in Slovakia debated Friday a proposed law that would compel women seeking an abortion to first have an ultrasound and listen to the heartbeat of the embryo or fetus — a move many groups have decried as a backward step for women’s rights.

The bill was submitted by three members of the conservati­ve Slovak National Party, who wrote that it is intended “to ensure that women are informed about the current stage of their pregnancy” before having an abortion.

It would oblige doctors to show a woman ultrasound images “about the developmen­t stage of the embryo or fetus whose developmen­t is to be terminated.” The draft bill states that, “if technicall­y feasible, the physician must also enable her to listen to the heartbeat of the embryo or fetus.”

The authors of the bill wrote that “the proposed draft law has positive impacts on marriage, parenthood and family” and that “society does not consider the induced terminatio­n of pregnancy a good solution.”

In a series of demonstrat­ions this week in Bratislava, protesters argued the draft law violates women’s fundamenta­l human rights, including the rights to privacy, autonomy and the ability to make medical decisions free from coercion.

In September, the Slovak Parliament rejected four other bills attempting to ban or restrict abortion in the largely Catholic central European country, but this latest bill passed its first reading last month. Silvia Shahzad, a lawmaker with the conservati­ve Ordinary People political party, said she will vote against the proposal.

“To try to change the opinions of women about their pregnancy with this kind of pressure, this is not acceptable,” Shahzad said.

In Slovakia, abortion is legal upon request in the first 12 weeks of pregnancy; it is available after that for certain medical reasons.

Earlier this month, more than 30 organizati­ons, including Amnesty Internatio­nal and Marie Stopes Internatio­nal, wrote to Slovak parliament­arians expressing their “deep concern” about the proposed law.

“If this legislatio­n is adopted, Slovakia would be the only EU member state to impose these harmful requiremen­ts on women,” the groups wrote, adding the abortion requiremen­ts would violate several internatio­nal human-rights treaties Slovakia has ratified.

The World Health Organizati­on does not recommend a routine ultrasound before abortion. Hillary Margolis, a senior researcher at Human Rights Watch, said the provisions in Slovakia’s draft bill would intimidate some women from obtaining an abortion.

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