PRESS RELEASE
The Health Committee, which oversees the
Department of Health in N Ireland, invited witnesses to give evidence regarding
the draft Abortion Guidelines recently issued for consultation by the Department
of Health.
After hearing evidence on the 17th October 2008 from various
witnesses, including Mrs Johanna Higgins, Barrister of the Association of
Catholic lawyers of Ireland, the Health Committee has produced its response and
published the full minutes of the evidence given in Hansard.
The Health
Committee states;
“The Committee fully endorsed the statement by
Professor John Keown, Kennedy Institute of Ethics, Georgetown University who
argued that 'The starting point of the Guidance should have been a clear
statement of the illegality of abortion in Northern Ireland: that it is a crime
punishable by a maximum of life imprisonment to use any means with intent to
procure miscarriage, and an offence to supply means knowing that they are to be
used with that intent. The Guidance should then have recalled the central if not
sole purpose of this prohibition: the protection of the unborn child, a purpose
which has informed the law against abortion for over 700 years. Only when the
rule had been clearly stated should the scope of the exception have been
considered'.”
This is welcomed by the ACLI, who presented Professor John
Keown’s statement in their evidence to the committee.
Mrs Higgins says:
“ We asked Dr Keown for his view on the guidelines given that he is a leading
expert in the field of ethics and abortion law, we are delighted to see that the
Health Committee have taken on board the serious concerns raised in relation to
the legal failings of the present draft guidance”.
Mrs Higgins stated
during her evidence to the Committee:
“The issue before the Department is
to explain the criminal law on abortion. Abortion is a matter of justice and
criminal law and it should not be regarded as a medical issue per se. In this
case, it is a matter of justice for the unborn child that the law should be
stated correctly. The criminal law on abortion exists entirely to protect the
unborn child; that is its one purpose. However, the departmental guidelines do
not include a single mention of the victim, which, in this area of law, is the
unborn child. That is a gross omission, to say the least.” (Hansard)
The
Department of Health invited evidence from both the pro life lobby and those who
seek to liberalise abortion laws. The only legal and medical evidence given were
from the Association of Catholic Lawyers of Ireland and Doctors for
Life.
End
Notes to editor:
Evidence session before Health
Committee:
http://www.niassembly.gov.uk/health/2007mandate/moe/2008/081017.htm
Report of the Health Committee and endorsement of Dr Keown’s
statement:
http://www.niassembly.gov.uk/health/2007mandate/responses/081110.htm
FULL STATEMENT BY DR KEOWN.
The opening statement of the
Guidance on the Termination of Pregnancy ("Within the scope of this Guidance and
the law in Northern Ireland, each Health & Social Services Trust must ensure
that its patients have access to termination of pregnancy services”) is
seriously misleading.
The starting point of the Guidance should be a
clear statement of the illegality of abortion in Northern Ireland: that it is a
crime punishable by a maximum of life imprisonment to use any means with intent
to procure miscarriage. The Guidance should then recall the central if not sole
purpose of this prohibition: the protection of the unborn child, a purpose which
has informed the law against abortion for over 700 years. Only when the rule has
been stated should the scope of the exception be considered. Similarly, the
Guidance should clearly state the law against child destruction and its central
purpose, the protection of a child capable of being born alive, and then note
the exception to this prohibition. (It is remarkable that paragraph 2.6 of the
Guidance, which purports to quote the statute, misstates this exception by
omitting the important word 'only'.)
Would one begin Guidance on the law
of theft, which recognizes that in exceptional circumstances A may lawfully
appropriate B’s property, by saying that "within the scope of law of theft, the
government should ensure that everyone has access to everyone else’s property"?
Further, just because there may be a defence to abortion in exceptional
circumstances does not mean that the government is under a duty to provide
access to abortion in those circumstances, any more than it is under a duty to
provide citizens ready access to weapons for use in self-defence. Moreover, the
government has a discretion as to how to allocate its healthcare resources: it
is perfectly entitled to deploy those resources on medical procedures which do
not involve the destruction of life.
John Keown MA DPhil PhD
Rose F
Kennedy Professor of Christian Ethics
Kennedy Institute of
Ethics
Georgetown University
About Professor John
Keown
John Keown is the Rose F Kennedy Professor of Christian Ethics
at Georgetown University, Washington DC. He graduated in law from Cambridge in
1984 and obtained a DPhil from Oxford in 1986 for a thesis on the historical
development of the law on abortion. After being called to the Bar of England and
Wales (Middle Temple) in 1986 he was appointed to a lectureship in medical law
at the University of Leicester. In 1993 he was appointed to a lectureship in the
law and ethics of medicine at Cambridge, where he was a Fellow of Queens’
College and Churchill College. In 2003 he assumed the Rose F Kennedy Chair at
Georgetown.
His many publications include three books, all published by
Cambridge University Press: Abortion, Doctors and the Law (1988); Euthanasia
Examined: Ethical, Clinical and Legal Perspectives (1995) and Euthanasia, Ethics
and Public Policy: An Argument Against Legalisation (2002)
Association of
Catholic Lawyers of Ireland
Co - Founders Mrs Johanna Higgins LLB,
Inn of the Court of Northern Ireland, The Kings Inns, Dublin and the Inner
Temple, London, Barrister.
Legal Adviser to the All Party Pro Life Group,
Stormont
Mrs Geraldine Foley LLB, The Kings Inns, Dublin and the Inner
Temple, London,
Barrister.
http://catholiclawyersblog.wordpress.com/
catholiclawyers@hotmail.com
AMDG+ All the actions and work of the ACLI
are consecrated to the Immaculate Heart Of Mary.
Posted
December 16, 2008
Catholic Family News
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