This opinion piece was published in the Perpectives section of The Courier-Mail on 13 February, 2008 & is reproduced here with the permission of Queensland Right to Life
No Need to Change Abortion Law
By Donna Purcell
February 2008
WITH State Parliament resuming yesterday,
it seems the member for Aspley, Bonny Barry,
is still hell-bent on introducing a Private
Member’s Bill to decriminalise abortion in
Queensland.
Decriminalisation means abortion would
be legal for any or no reason until the day of
birth, a position only extremist ideologues
would endorse.
A small group of radical protesters
answered Barry’s call to arms when they
attempted to drown out speakers at a Respect
for Women Rally in the city on Saturday.
Armed with megaphones, tin whistles
and placards, some painted with simulated
bloodstains, they were reminiscent of the type
of protesters marching the streets of Brisbane
in the 1970s for the same cause.
It is a pity that they didn’t listen. One
speaker, a mother of four children, was born
without a hand and part of her arm. She told
how she in turn was a source of inspiration
for another couple whose child was shown on
ultrasound to have a similar defect. Although
they could have had an abortion, they could
see that a disability need not be a death
sentence and they had their baby.
Another speaker, a country Queensland
GP, told of a child he fathered before he was
married who was adopted out. Father and son
were re-united many years later and both are
grateful abortion was not chosen.
Barry’s personal conviction reportedly
stems from a case of incest where a doctor
helped cover up for the father’s crime. It was
at his insistence and with him present that
the abortion was performed.
Understandably
she was moved by the young woman’s
circumstances, but some reflection on the
incident now is worthwhile.
Both actions – the incest and the abortion
– were unlawful, but the abortion served to
conceal the crime.
Incest is always very secretive, but a
pregnancy in a minor serves to reveal it.
The solution, according to Barry, is to accept
the need to get rid of the evidence in a guiltfree
abortion.
As a parliamentarian now in a much more
responsible position than a junior nurse, can
she not see that freely available, no questions asked
abortion is simply an open opportunity
for incest and other types of sexual assault
to go unpunished and unnoticed?
Does it not
simply perpetuate the attitude among some
sections of society that women must be always
available to men, and that if pregnancy occurs,
they can just get an abortion?
However, as always, the “hard cases”
like incest are really just a smokescreen for
the real reason for Barry’s Bill on abortion.
She believes abortion is “a fundamental
human right” and that keeping abortion in
the Criminal Code “burdens (women) with
criminal intent”. In other words, she wants
legal abortion on demand with the woman
being the sole arbiter of what happens.
This is actually official ALP policy, but one
would have hoped that some of Barry’s
training might have informed her political
position. Does she not know anything about
the development of the tiny human being
therein, the marvellous and rapid unfolding
of events dictated by the genetic make-up
of the new human being?
There is no excuse these days for
ignorance by MPs of facts so relevant to their
considerations. There are two human beings
intimately involved in pregnancy, and there is
no woman who has ever been pregnant who
doesn’t in her heart know this.
In order to submit to an abortion, a
woman must suppress, at least unconsciously,
this awareness.
Even countries like Japan that have no law
against abortion have shrines where women
can place floral and other gifts in memory of
children lost through miscarriage, abortion and
premature birth.
The importance of the law is that it is
a measure of the seriousness of the action
contemplated. The law on abortion was
taken fairly directly from Britain in days when
nothing was known about the development
of the unborn. Yet such was the respect
for all human life that a doctor could only
be excused from a crime of performing an
abortion if it was done to save the physical life
of the mother.
The law has been variously re-interpreted
to cover other reasons, but it is important to
note that these judicial interpretations have
never been fully tested in Queensland.
However, the law when enforced is not without teeth in protecting women. Recently
in New South Wales where the legal situation
is much the same as in Queensland, a female
doctor was charged with procuring abortion
without proper consent, found guilty and
her medical registration was cancelled
permanently.
It would be anachronistic to remove a
law giving legal recognition of the scientific
fact that the unborn are also human beings
deserving equal protection. Such a situation
would be reminiscent of the prevailing attitude
towards slaves before the abolition of slavery
in the 18th century. As the property of their
masters, their lives and suffering counted for
nothing.
Those wishing to see the decriminalisation
or legalisation of abortion also refuse to
acknowledge the humanity of the unborn, and
by urging no restrictions they become party to
a furthering of violence on women and their
children.
Women do not want abortion – what
those with unplanned pregnancies want is to
not be pregnant in the situation they are in.
So instead of removing the baby, let’s support
these women to change their situation.
Instead of promoting abortion, we should
be giving women real choice by empowering
them to follow their hearts. Women with unexpected pregnancies deserve unexpected
joy, respect, love and support.
Parliament should keep the current law
on abortion in place and address the issue
of unwanted and unplanned pregnancies by
significantly increasing funding to pregnancy
support and counselling services.
Donna Purcell is a Toowoomba GP and
member of the state committee of
Queensland Right to Life.
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