IFPA wants Youth Defence pickets jailed

The Irish Family Planning Association has sought the High Court's leave to seek the attachment and committal to prison of some…

The Irish Family Planning Association has sought the High Court's leave to seek the attachment and committal to prison of some members of Youth Defence, the anti-abortion group, for alleged contempt of court.

Following an undertaking not to breach an existing injunction restraining picketing of the association's clinic in Cathal Brugha Street, Dublin, Ms Justice Laffoy yesterday adjourned the application for a week.

The court granted the association leave for orders of attachment and committal to be issued against Mr Don Lane and Mr John Delaney, who were held to have been properly served and who did not attend yesterday's hearing.

Mr Micheal P. O'Higgins, counsel for six members of Youth Defence, told the court his clients would be contending that they had not breached or flouted the court restraint.

READ MORE

Ms Justice Laffoy said next week the court would also deal with similar applications against other people associated with Youth Defence whom, she held, had not been properly served with notice of yesterday's proceedings.

The association claims its clinic has been picketed in breach of a court order and that anti-abortion activists hand out leaflets to the clinic's clients and display placards saying the clinic "exports Irish babies for slaughter".

It claims that since the court restraint was granted earlier this year, the association has been forced to invest more than £25,000 on additional security measures and that staff time expended on dealing with the problem was estimated at £10,000.