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Reuters, July 23, 2004
Dutch Abortion Ship to Fight
Gov't Travel Ban
By Melanie Cheary
AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - A Dutch floating abortion
clinic banned from sailing abroad after controversial
visits to Ireland and Poland pledged on Friday
to take the Dutch government to court within
weeks to lift the restriction.
The clinic, which offers the abortion pill in
international waters to women in countries
where they are illegal or more restricted than
the Netherlands, was told by the government
last week that it could only work within 25
km of Amsterdam.
"The state secretary has basically said
we cannot work abroad anymore and this of course
defeats the object of our campaign," said
Rebecca Gomperts, the founding doctor of the
Women on Waves Foundation, which manages the
clinic.
The center-right government granted the clinic
a permit to provide first trimester abortions
but for the first time stipulated it must stay
within 25 km of the Dutch capital in order
to be able to consult with a nearby hospital.
Women on Waves argues that modern technologies
like satellite phones and the Internet enable
it to communicate with any hospital while on
the open seas.
"We are appealing and we want to go to court
within a couple of weeks," Gomperts told
Reuters.
The foundation says a woman dies every five minutes
somewhere in the world because of an illegal
or unsafe abortion, and that its doctors provide
counseling and abortions in international waters
where Dutch ships operate under Dutch law.
"These are totally unnecessary deaths and
they can be prevented," said Gomperts,
who founded Women on Waves in 1999.
"As a doctor it is totally unacceptable
to know that you can help somebody but you
have to turn them away. You know they have
nowhere to go except to a backstreet abortionist,
or to do it themselves. They risk their health
and their lives," she added.
Women on Waves, which leases ships to carry its
clinic on campaigns, sailed to Ireland in 2001
and Poland in 2003. Both countries have an
overwhelmingly Roman Catholic population and
some of the strictest anti-abortion laws in
the world.
The Netherlands currently holds the six month
rotating presidency of the newly enlarged European
Union (news - web sites), which includes predominantly
Catholic countries like Portugal, Spain, Poland,
Ireland and Italy.
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