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San Francisco Chronicle, March
29, 2005
Abortion Foes
Get More Vocal as EU Expands
Catholic Church
pushes its message
Author : Elizabeth Bryant
Porto, Portugal -- Pregnant with her third child
in January, 36-year-old Maria Silva decided
two were enough.
In most European countries, the next step would
have been simple: Check into a clinic for an
abortion.
But Silva lives in the northern Portuguese town
of Aveiro, where seven women went on trial
in late 2003 for having abortions. So instead,
she followed step-by-step Internet directions
on how to end her pregnancy.
"I didn't want this pregnancy," said
the married mother of two boys, speaking from
her home about 40 miles from Porto, in the
country's northeast. "Now, I feel free,
like a new person."
Until recently Portugal and Ireland had Europe's
toughest abortion codes. But the European Union's
enlargement last year has changed the equation.
Today, nine of the 25 EU members, including
three newcomers, either restrict abortions
or -- in the case of Malta -- ban them altogether.
Some of the other seven new members have more
restrictive laws after the first trimester.
Interviews with more than two dozen European
politicians, sociologists and activists on
both sides of the abortion debate suggest an
increasingly polarized region where secular
and liberal values are clashing against those
in conservative, Roman Catholic countries.
While France recently marked 30 years of legal
abortions and Spain is moving to relax its
strict abortion laws, some countries -- notably
Poland and Slovakia -- appear to be heading
in the opposite direction.
"There's no doubt there are more anti-choice
forces at work in Europe (now) than over the
last 20 years," said Joke van Kampen,
an Amsterdam-based consultant on sexual and
reproductive rights, who is pro-choice. "Even
in the Netherlands (which allows abortion on
demand), there are some groups picketing in
front of clinics. That would have been unheard
of a few years ago."
To be sure, Europe's anti-abortion movement has
nowhere near the grassroots and political clout
of its U.S. counterpart, which has found receptiveness
in the Bush administration. In most Western
European countries, its influence remains minimal.
But anti-abortion advocates say they are powered
not only by an increasingly activist Roman
Catholic Church, but also by Europe's low birth
rates and concerns about human rights.
"I think Europeans are beginning to wake
up," said Brussels-based Emilia Klepacka,
European director of the World Youth Alliance,
a U.S. anti-abortion group. She estimates membership
in the 5-year-old European branch at half a
million.
"Young people are fascinated by the whole
concept of human dignity," Klepacka said.
"And many people are concerned about the
fact that the European continent is dying,
that there are fewer and fewer Europeans of
working age. They're beginning to rethink their
approach toward the family."
Even in Britain, where a 2001 abortion of a 28-week-old
fetus with a cleft palate sparked controversy,
anti-abortion activists claim public sentiment
is shifting. In a poll taken in mid-March,
59 percent favored further restrictions on
the time limit for abortions, now 24 weeks.
"We believe people are rethinking their
absolutist stance on abortions and women's
rights," said Josephine Quintavalle, spokeswoman
for the London- based Pro-Life Alliance. "The
focus is moving from the mother to the child."
Like a host of other social issues in Europe,
the right to abortion is a national, not a
regional, matter -- underscoring the limits
of the EU's authority. Nonetheless, battles
over the primacy of life vs. women's choice
have inevitably found their way into institutions
such as the European Court of Human Rights,
which ruled last year against a fetus-rights
case.
Some pro-choice groups also believe the influence
of conservative Eastern European lawmakers
and Christian Democratic ones in the West may
weigh in on issues like EU funding for family
planning organizations in developing countries
that offer abortion counseling or services.
Anti-abortion lawmaker Anna Zaborska of Slovakia
was elected to head the European Parliament's
women's committee in July, over strong objections.
In Portugal, a conservative Catholic country
of 10 million, abortions are allowed only to
save a women's life and mental health, or in
cases of rape, incest or fetal impairment.
Prime Minister-elect Jose Socrates has pledged
to hold a referendum on whether to liberalize
the code. But even his Socialist Party colleagues
are split: The country's former Socialist leader,
Antonio Guterres, was an abortion opponent.
"I myself have strong doubts about changing
the law," said 43-year-old Helena Vilaca,
a Socialist Party member strolling the dusty,
cobblestone streets of Porto one Sunday. "When
I became a mother, I started to see life in
a different way."
Pro-choice groups estimate that several thousand
Portuguese women go abroad for abortions each
year, mostly to neighboring Spain, where similar
abortion restrictions are interpreted more
liberally. Some 20,000 to 40,000 women quietly
search out medical help nearer to home or perform
the procedure themselves.
Silva found directions on how to terminate her
pregnancy on the European Internet site of
Women on Waves, which publishes directions
in French, Spanish, Dutch and Polish, as well
as Portuguese. Silva's husband bought the abortion-
inducing medication, Misoprostol, which is
also used to treat ulcers, in a pharmacy, and
the procedure went off without any complications.
But Silva is still afraid to tell even close
friends about it. "This is a very conservative
society," she said.
Dozens of doctors, nurses and patients involved
in illegal abortions have been hauled into
court on charges that carry prison sentences.
So far, however, virtually all of them, including
those in the Aveiro trial, have been fined
or acquitted. Even the Catholic Church has
called for decriminalizing abortions, while
supporting the current law.
Most observers doubt that Portugal will follow
the example of Spain, where Socialist Prime
Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero has promised
to drastically overhaul the country's strict
abortion legislation as part of far- reaching
social reforms.
In Poland, the ruling Democratic Left Alliance
Party has pushed back a long-promised pledge
to loosen strict abortion laws until after
fall elections. Surveys show most Poles support
a looser code, but that sentiment doesn't translate
into public activism, women's rights groups
say. And the Roman Catholic Church remains
a powerful political force there.
"Politicians think it's better to listen
to what the church is saying, not the society,"
said Wanda Nowicka, head of the Federation
for Women and Family Planning. She estimates
that up to 200,000 illegal abortions are carried
out in Poland ever year.
Unlike Poland, Roman Catholic Slovakia has retained
Communist-era laws allowing abortion on demand.
Even so, pro-choice activists say, a growing
number of doctors and hospitals refuse to perform
abortions.
The activists fear that Slovakia's center-right
government may revive talks on a proposed treaty
with the Vatican, allowing medical practitioners
to refuse to perform abortions on religious
grounds.
"It's a political issue, because the country
is really quite liberal," said Olga Pietruchova,
head of Bratislava-based Pro-Choice Slovakia.
"On Sundays, most people go to shopping
malls, not to church."
Abortion laws in EU nations
Allowed on demand in first trimester or later:
Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark,
Estonia, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary,
Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Netherlands, Slovakia,
Slovenia, Sweden
Allowed for health, economic and social reasons:
Finland, United Kingdom
Allowed for health reasons or in cases of rape,
incest or fetal impairment: Cyprus, Luxembourg,
Poland, Portugal, Spain
Allowed only to save woman's life (including
from suicide): Ireland
Banned: Malta
Source: International Planned Parenthood Federation
report, 2004
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