Government to act 'speedily' if abortion law is required

Sun, Nov 25, 2012, 00:00

   

The Government will act “speedily” to implement legislation to provide limited access to abortion if that recommendation from the expert group report is accepted by Cabinet, Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform Brendan Howlin has said.

The report says legislation for limited abortion consistent with the Supreme Court ruling in the X case is required after the European Court of Human Rights judgment on the ABC cases.

Mr Howlin insisted the Coalition would not be the seventh administration to fail to act on the 1992 Supreme Court judgment on the X case. The report will be discussed by Cabinet on Tuesday.

“We have an expert group now to tell us in very considered detail how that is to be done and I have no doubt that this Government will act very speedily in a measured, calm way to provide for that instruction from Supreme Court.”

He said he hoped a “calm, considered, comprehensive” debate would begin in the Dáil next week, “and very speedily thereafter the Government will come to its own decisions in terms of drafting legislation and presenting that to the Oireachtas”. He was speaking on RTÉ’s This Week programme.

According to newspaper reports today, the expert group set up to deal with how the State deals with the issue of lawful abortions says legislation for the limited provision of abortion is required to make the State complaint with the European Court of Human Rights ruling in the ABC case.

Reports say the expert group set up to deal with how the State deals with the issue of lawful abortions says legislation for the limited provision of abortion is required to make the State compliant with the European Court of Human Rights ruling in the ABC case.

The report offers a number of options but legislation and regulations are the preferred choice. It says the Minister for Health should identify at which medical centres an abortion can take place.

The report also calls for the establishment of an appeals process for women who have been refused an abortion to seek a review of the decision.

It suggests terminations on the fringes of viability should take place in medical centres with neonatal care units and be conducted to maximise the changes of foetal survival.

The report restates that a woman is only lawfully entitled to an abortion in this State when there is a real and substantial risk to her life and when termination is the only way to avert this risk. Included among the risks is the risk of suicide.

The expert group report is due to be discussed at length by the Cabinet on Tuesday. The group, chaired by Mr Justice Sean Ryan, stressed in its report that abortion is legal in Ireland under the limited circumstances provided for by the Supreme Court ruling on the X case.

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