Ireland to vote on abortion bill today: Savita death

Dublin: Months after the outrage over death of Indian dentist Savita Halappanavar, Ireland is all set to vote on abortion bill on Thursday.

The vote which was earlier scheduled for Wednesday night, will now be held today after Irish lawmakers demanded prolonged debate over 195 amendments of the bill which is called “Protection of Life During Pregnancy Bill”. 


The bill would legalise abortion in cases where a mother’s life is at risk.

A 31-year old Savita Halappanavar, hailing from India’s Karnataka, succumbed to pregnancy complications as she couldn’t undergo abortion in Ireland.

Savita’s death triggered massive protest in India, Ireland and England and hence paved the way for abortion law reforms in Ireland.

Ireland’s constitution does not allow doctors to abort a foetus whose heart is still beating, but for the first time in the majorly Catholic country’s history, Ireland will today cast a vote on abortion bill.

Prime Minister Enda Kenny acceded to lawmakers' demands for an extended round-the-clock debate of the bill, which would authorize abortions for medical emergencies.

Outside more than 100 anti-abortion protesters, who had spent the night reciting prayers with rosary beads beside the entrance to the Parliament building, vowed to spend a second night kneeling on the spot in hopes of inspiring lawmakers to rebel against Kenny. "Keep abortion illegal, babies can LIVE without it," their placards read.

But Kenny enjoys the largest parliamentary majority in Irish history, so the bill's passage appeared certain. The bill already received overwhelming backing in an initial vote last week.

While Ireland officially outlaws abortion in all circumstances, its laws on the matter have been muddled since 1992, when the Supreme Court ruled that abortion should be legal in cases where doctors deem a woman's life at risk from continued pregnancy, including, most controversially, from her own threats to commit suicide if denied one.

Six previous governments refused to back the judgment, citing the suicide grounds as open to abuse by abortion-seekers. But Ireland faced renewed pressure to pass legislation on medical-emergency abortions after the European Court of Human Rights ruled in 2011 that Ireland's inaction meant that pregnant women in medical crises faced potentially dangerous delays in receiving terminations in neighboring England, where abortion was legalized in 1967.

Still, Kenny's government didn't draft its abortion bill until after the legal limbo was widely blamed for killing a woman in an Irish hospital last year. In that case, a woman 17 weeks pregnant with her first child was diagnosed with a miscarriage, but doctors refused her pleas for an abortion and said they couldn't act until the fetal heartbeat stopped. The delay contributed to her contraction of fatal blood poisoning.

The bill proposes that one doctor's opinion is sufficient for a woman in an immediate emergency to receive an abortion; a woman facing life-threatening complications would need two doctors' support for an abortion; and a suicidal woman would need her threats to be verified as credible by three doctors, including two psychiatrists, for an abortion to be permitted. 















With Agency Inputs
 
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