In ICBC
In recent days bishops have sent the following briefing note to deputies and senators on the Protection of Life During Pregnancy Bill 2013.
The briefing note highlights flaws in the abortion bill which is
currently being debated in Oireachtas Éireann and explains that, if the
abortion bill is enacted, it:
- will fundamentally alter the culture and practice of medical care in Ireland;
- accepts the premise that abortion is an appropriate response to suicidal ideation; and,
- creates serious moral, legal and constitutional conflicts in the area of freedom of conscience and religious belief.
1. This Bill will fundamentally alter the culture and practice of medical care in Ireland.
It provides a wide and at times subjective interpretation of the risk
to the life of the mother, by which the life of an unborn child can be
ended. This is clear because:
- In the assessment of ‘a real and substantial’ risk to the life of
the mother, whether arising from a medical situation or a threat of
suicide, the explanatory memorandum to the Bill is clear that, ‘this
risk does not need to be immediate nor inevitable’. This means that a
risk which is ‘remote’ or ‘avoidable’ could trigger the death of an
innocent and voiceless child in the womb;
- At the same time, the assessment of risk is to be based on
‘reasonable opinion’, which in the words of the notes to the Bill,
‘means an opinion formed by the practitioner or committee, as the case
may be, in good faith which has regard to the need to preserve unborn
human life as far as practicable’. The phrase ‘in good faith’ is subject
to wide interpretation;
- In addition, Sections 58 and 59 of the Offences Against the Person
Act 1861 have been repealed, thereby giving doctors latitude to
terminate pregnancy in a wider range of circumstances than heretofore.
While the Bill makes it an offence to ‘intentionally destroy human
life’, it explicitly excludes the possibility of such an offence for all
terminations carried out under the Bill;
- The Bill provides mechanisms of appeal for a mother to vindicate her
right to life. However, it provides no mechanism of defence or appeal
for the unborn. The Government claims vindication of the right to life
of the unborn is provided by the legislative obligation on medical
personnel to ‘have regard to’ the right to life of the unborn ‘as far as
is practicable’. However, the Heads of Bill are clear that: “This
emphasis on preserving unborn human life as far as practicable governs
the actual medical procedure – the termination of pregnancy only and not
whether there is a real and substantial risk to the life of the
mother.” In other words, it applies only to the procedure carried out
following the assessment of the risk to the life of the mother but not
to the assessment of risk itself, upon which the decision to end the
life of the unborn will be made.
Taken together, these aspects of the Bill mean that in practice the
right to life of the unborn child is no longer treated as equal to that
of the mother. This represents a fundamental shift in current medical
culture and practice in Irish hospitals, which to date have provided
some of the safest places in the world for a mother and her unborn child
during pregnancy precisely because they were treated as two patients
with an equal right to life. The failure of this Bill to adequately
vindicate the equal right to life of the unborn, in so many respects,
provides grounds for a viable challenge to the Constitutionality of the
Bill itself and that this ought to be pursued.
2. The Bill accepts the premise that abortion is an appropriate response to suicidal ideation. This is contrary to substantial medical evidence.
- The direct and intentional ending of the life of an unborn child, at
any stage of pregnancy from the moment of conception, is never morally
acceptable. What will happen if the unborn child is close to viability,
say, at twenty two weeks? Would termination be postponed to give the
child a greater chance of survival outside the womb? Who will advocate
for the rights of the child in this situation? The Bill is silent on
these matters.
- Furthermore, where the unborn child is deemed viable, the Bill
envisages the child being delivered prematurely in response to the
suicidal ideation of the mother. Such premature delivery runs a high
risk of serious and permanent damage to the health of the child. We are
told that the child will then be placed into State care. How can such a
foreseeable damaging and high risk medical procedure be reconciled with
the Constitutional duty on the State (Article 42A) to ensure that in all
decisions the welfare of the child shall be ‘the paramount
consideration’ and with the provisions of Part 15 of the Criminal
Justice Act 2006 on the Reckless Endangerment of Children?
- A further very serious confusion exists in relation to the scope for
“termination” in response to the risk of suicide. According to the
interpretive notes to the Heads of the Bill: ‘In circumstances where the
unborn may be potentially viable outside the womb, doctors must make
all efforts to sustain its life after delivery. However, that
requirement does not go so far as to oblige a medical practitioner to
disregard a real and substantial risk to the life of the woman on the
basis that it will result in the death of the unborn.’ It is legally
possible to understand this note to mean that where the child is
‘potentially viable outside the womb’, but there is a real and
substantial risk to the life of the mother based on suicidal ideation, a
doctor may directly and intentionally intervene in a manner that ‘will
result in the death of the [viable] unborn’. There are no time limits on
such an intervention.
3. The
Bill also creates a number of serious moral, legal and Constitutional
conflicts in the area of freedom of conscience and religious belief, notably:
- The Bill provides for conscientious objection by ‘any medical
practitioner, nurse or midwife’ only. It excludes others who may be
obliged to co-operate in providing abortion services against their
conscience or religious belief. This is in contrast to the wording of
the proposed Protection of Human Life in Pregnancy Bill 2001, which
provided for conscientious objection by ‘any person’ carrying out or
assisting in an abortion. The operation of this clause is also
unacceptable because it involves a form of co-operation in evil by
obliging those who conscientiously object to knowingly put the patient
in to the care of medical personnel who will carry out an abortion. In
effect, therefore, medical personnel are being given no choice but to
cooperate in an abortion. This is in contrast to the practice in many
other countries which ask only that the patient be handed over to the
care of other medical personnel. Limiting the scope of conscientious
objection in this way is potentially in conflict with Article 44.2.3 of
the Constitution, which states that: “The State shall not impose any
disabilities or make any discrimination on the ground of religious
profession, belief or status”, with the general direction of legal
interpretation of Article 9 of the European Convention on Human Rights
and with recent UK based cases such as Doogan & Anor v NHS Greater
Glasgow & Clyde Health Board [2013] ScotCS CSIH 36.
- Article 44.2.3 also raises important questions of principle about
the application of the Party Whip system to oblige members of the
Oireachtas to vote in favour of this legislation, against their
religious conscience. It may even open the possibility of a
Constitutional challenge to the legislation itself on the basis of an
un-constitutional legislative process.
- The obligation on ‘appropriate institutions’ identified by the
Minister to provide abortion services may be in conflict with existing
legal arrangements and, in some cases with Article 44.2.5 of the
Constitution, which states that: “Every religious denomination shall
have the right to manage its own affairs, own, acquire and administer
property, movable and immovable, and maintain institutions for religious
or charitable purposes”.
A final question: Was it possible to provide an adequate response to
the European Court by means of justiciable professional guidelines
which do not involve legislating for the direct and intentional killing
of the unborn?
The questions posed above are substantial. They reflect the seriousness of the issues at stake.
Legislators should be free to exercise their conscience on this
fundamental moral issue, in accordance with the principles of a free and
democratic society and their express right as citizens under Article
44.2.3 of the Constitution. No one should entrust the decisions of
their conscience to another on issues like this which are, literally,
matters of life and death.