IS KILLING UNBORN BABIES A HUMAN RIGHT ?
Averthanus L. D'Souza.


 An interesting case has come into prominence in Europe very recently. Three 
Irish 
women who had to go to Britain to procure the termination of their pregnancies 
are 
filing a suit before the European Court of Human Rights challenging the Irish 
Constitution, which protects all human life from the moment of conception. 
Their 
contention is that the lack of abortion facilities in Ireland breaches the 
human 
rights of women to terminate their pregnancies.

 There are two distinct legal problems involved in this case. One, whether the 
women 
have a right to terminate their pregnancies; and two, whether the European 
Court of 
Human Rights can overturn the Constitution of one of its member States.

 The Irish Constitution guarantees to its citizens the right to life, from the 
moment of conception till the time of natural death. Consistent with this basic 
principle, any services which are intended to terminate human life at any stage 
are 
banned, except in special circumstances duly provided by law. There are no 
"abortion 
clinics" in Ireland where women can obtain elective abortions. Those who want 
to 
have abortions usually travel to Britain, where such services are available.

 The present case presents not only a legal challenge, but also a challenge to 
the 
cultural and moral values which have defined European civilization and 
tradition. 
This case comes just two months after Ireland became a signatory to the Treaty 
of 
Lisbon. The Lisbon Treaty came into operation on December 1st 2009. The 
Republic of 
Ireland signed the Treaty hesitatingly only after receiving assurances that 
it's 
Constitution would be respected and protected, and that no actions of the 
European 
Union would in any way infringe upon the rights guaranteed to it's citizens by 
the 
Irish Constitution.

 The case filed by the three Irish women poses a direct challenge to the Irish 
Constitution, and it will be interesting to see how the European Court of Human 
Rights will deal with this matter. The decision of the European Court of Human 
Rights will have very far-reaching consequences, not only for the members of 
the 
European Union, but also for other countries which are not part of the European 
Union.

 It is commonly understood that the Treaty on European Union and the Treaty 
establishing the European Community which have been updated by the Treaty of 
Lisbon 
do not, in any way, infringe upon the sovereign rights of the member states of 
the 
E.U. All the institutions of the E.U. whether political, economic or social are 
only 
set up with the explicit consent of the member States. There are no "overriding 
powers" given to the E.U. A cursory reading of the terms of the Treaty of 
Lisbon 
reveals that what undergirds the Treaty are the principles of Subsidiarity and 
Proportionality (Article 3 b). In the common man's language, this means that 
the 
E.U. pledges itself not to override the laws, structures, or institutions of 
its 
Member States. In fact, it explicitly avers that the E.U. will only act in 
those 
areas on which the Member States have authorized it to act. Article 2 A, 
section 5 
reads: "In certain areas and under the conditions laid down in the Treaties, 
the 
Union shall have competence to carry out actions to support, coordinate or 
supplement the actions of the Member States, without thereby superseding their 
competence in these areas.

 Legally binding acts of the Union adopted on the basis of the provisions of 
the 
Treaties relating to these areas shall not entail harmonization of Member 
States 
laws or regulations."

 To the (legally) untrained mind of a layman it appears that the claim of the 
three 
Irish women that the non-availability of abortion services in Ireland 
constitutes a 
violation of their 'human rights' is not only legally untenable, but is also 
ethically specious.

 The ethico-cultural dimension.

 Keeping aside the legal conundrum for the jurists to unravel, it is important 
that 
we consider the ethical and social implications of the claim that women have a 
right 
to arbitrarily terminate their pregnancies, and that, therefore, the State has 
a 
duty to provide them with all the facilities required for this purpose.

 The vast majority of medical opinion holds that a human embryo or foetus is a 
distinct human person. This should be obvious to anyone with common sense. A 
human 
foetus is not a cat or a dog or a mouse - it is human, and will eventually 
develop 
into a fully recognizable human being. Therefore the act of destroying a human 
foetus is clearly an act of destroying a human being. The second consideration 
is 
also clear. The embryo or the foetus is a distinct being, and not a "part" of a 
woman's body. The woman only hosts the foetus until it is time for it to 
develop on 
its own. Nature has provided all (female) mammals with wombs to enable the 
embryos 
to develop into foetuses and then to grow into fully developed individuals who 
can 
survive outside the womb. Even outside the womb, the infants have to be 
nurtured and 
taken care of until such time as they are able to take care of themselves. The 
common sense understanding of the process is that a mother is "entrusted" with 
the 
well-being of her child till the child becomes an adult and can take care of 
herself/himself. Without getting involved in any technical debates, it is 
obvious 
that an unborn baby is a human person with rights and privileges like any other 
human person. These rights and privileges have to be respected and protected - 
first 
of all by the parents themselves, and specially the mother, and then, also by 
society.

 Any society which has permitted the killing of unborn babies has violated it's 
fundamental responsibility to protect the lives of it's citizens, specially 
those 
who are the weakest and therefore the most vulnerable. Once a society opens its 
doors to the murder of innocent children - for that is what abortion really is 
- 
there is no limit to which it can proceed with permitting the murder of other 
citizens. The inexorable logic of permitting murder is that that society is 
doomed 
to become a society which condones, and even actively promotes, the murder of 
the 
elderly, who are considered to be a drag on society, of the physically 
disabled, the 
mentally challenged and the economically disprivileged. Human history, even in 
the 
very recent past, has shown that societies can become brutal and oppressive and 
murderous. Such dehumanized societies can find all kinds of reasons to 
eliminate 
large sections of its citizens: either reasons of physical or mental 
deficiencies, 
or reasons of race, or reasons of ethnicity, or of colour of the skin, or 
language.

 The problem starts with the basic disrespect for human life. Humankind has not 
yet 
learned that all life is sacred, specially human life, which represents the 
pinnacle 
of evolution. We are confronted with serious contradictions in our own 
behavior. We 
form societies to protect animals and trees, turtles and whales and dolphins, 
but at 
the same time we condone - nay, even actively propagate, the murder of human 
beings 
at any stage of their development - from within the womb to old age. Modern 
society 
has found a devious way to cloak the grim reality of murder by cloaking it 
under 
euphemisms such as "the medical termination of pregnancy", the movement of 
"death 
with dignity," the "right to die," and other stupid excuses such as "ethnic 
cleansing" or "eugenics." However we might seek to escape the stark reality, 
murder 
remains murder - under any form or description. We seem to have forgotten that 
no 
human authority has given us life, and, consequently, no human authority - 
whether a 
pregnant woman, a doctor or the State, can destroy life, except under very 
exceptional circumstances, and under due process of law.

 In his Rosenthal Lectures given at the Northwestern University School of Law 
in 
1960, Lord Radcliffe reminds us: "Suddenly the old question, The law of God or 
the 
law of man?, which in times of less stress and in communities of lower tension 
seems 
only an echo of a "battle long ago," became once more a dreadful reality. It is 
because of those experiences, which have been added to the imaginative 
inheritance 
of European history, that so many men have begun again to ask whether the law 
itself 
must not teach that it and all its demands, no matter with what formal legality 
they 
may be clothed, are subject to the overriding veto of a law of Nature or a law 
of 
God."


Averthanus L. D'Souza,
Dona Paula, Goa


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