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Alliance for Choice

Free, Safe, Legal, Local Abortion For Everyone Who Needs It

  • Need an abortion
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5 Years of Decrim!

5 years ago we gathered to celebrate the a monumental law change which saw the decriminalisation of abortion and the introduction of equal marriage in Northern Ireland. This was the outworking of decades of campaigning, lobbying and legal challenges alongside practical support under one of the most draconian abortion laws in the world. Let’s reflect on where we are in 2024.

No more prosecutions for self managed abortions.

Since the law changes, no one can be criminalised for self managing their abortion with safe pills from Women on Web or Women Help Women. This is huge and put us ahead of Britain, Ireland and most of Europe!

Abortion access in all 5 health trusts

All 5 health trusts have provision for Early Medical Abortion, that is abortion with pills. However this is only one location in some Trusts meaning long journeys for some for example from Enniskillen to Altnagalven instead of a closer NHS site.

Surgical abortion is less accessible. Only one site provides surgical abortion, meaning every Trust must refer there. Currently surgical abortion is only offered up to 20 weeks, which falls short of the 24 weeks provided for in the regulations.

Later term abortion can be even more complicated to access. Alliance for Choice have had to advocate for people who clearly met the requirements, sometimes helping them access care here others supporting them to travel for treatment they should have had at home.

The current level of provision, low levels of trained providers and lack of awareness amongst the medical profession is unacceptable 5 years on. 

Relationship and Sexuality Education

The 2019 legislation states there should be
‘“age-appropriate, comprehensive and scientifically accurate education on sexual and reproductive health and rights, covering prevention of early pregnancy and access to abortion”

Instead we’ve had delays, consultations which focus on parents opting out, and an ongoing ‘mini inquiry’.

Our young people deserve, and had the right to, better.

What else?

Outside of the Regulations Safe Access Zones have been implemented and enforced at all sites providing abortion care! Again we were far ahead of elsewhere in these Islands on delivering this, with the Republic of Ireland and Scotland implanting similar legislation recently and England and Wales expected to in the near future.

Safe Access Zones have had varying success depending on the location, and they must be reviewed to ensure people accessing treatment or their workplace are protected from harassment.

Despite the regulations allowing the NI Health Minister to adopt telemedicine, and this measure being introduced by our neighbours during the pandemic and then retained due to it efficiency, we do not have telemedicine abortion in Northern Ireland. We need telemedicine abortion to address many of the barriers faced by women and pregnant people who need to access abortion be that travelling from a rural area, fitting appointments around work or caring, or being in an abusive or controlling home environment.

We called for telemedicine when the regulations were drawn up, and 5 years on we continue to repeat this call.

So where are we now?

Sometimes it’s hard to see how far we’ve come when our day to day is supporting those who fall through the cracks, and pushing for delivery and improvement of services.

Thousands of women and pregnant people have been able to access abortion care a lot closer to home than 5 years ago. While the latest figures show around 3 a week are still travelling to England, which needs to change, this is a vast reduction from 28 a week before the law change.

Unknown numbers are safely self managing their abortion without fear of prosecution with pills from Women on Web or Women Help Women.

However the lack of implementation of the regulations, limited sites providing abortion, and no telemedicine are shortcomings.

On paper we have one of the best abortion laws in Europe, but not in practice. We incorporated CEDAW recommendations into domestic legislation, but those recommendations have not been delivered.   We’ve some amazing conscientious providers committed to working in what continue to be pretty difficult circumstances, we need a health service and department that supports them.

The best abortion law is no abortion law, where abortion is treated as other healthcare. Removing criminalisation was a big step along that road.

tags: Abortion access, decriminalisation
categories: Campaigning, Legislation, Provision
Tuesday 10.22.24
Posted by Emma Campbell
 

Safe Abortion Day 2023

Thursday September 28th 2023 is the International Day for Safe Abortion, and we have plans!
We will be rallying at Shaftsbury Square from 12:30pm calling for the implementation of abortion services and looking ahead to the introduction of Safe Access Zone. Keep an eye on our socials too as we see how the SOSNI is faring and some other actions.

There will be events taking place all over the world, including in Dublin from our friends in Abortion Rights Campaign on Thursday, in Malta where Voice for Choice will be marching once again on Saturday and Stop Violencies Andorra have activities planned from 26 - 30 September! Check out
http://www.september28.org/ to see what all is happening.

We have been told that Safe Access Zones will be in place ‘in a few weeks’ for a few months now, so we are not taking anything for granted, but this is a firm commitment from DOH that SAZs will be live this week. We still do not have commissioned abortion services either, so we’ve plenty to make noise about. Keep reading to learn more about how we got here, and what’s next.

Safe Access Zones

We are pleased to see a statement from the DoH today, 25th September, that they SAZs will be in place by the end of this week, the 29th September.
Earlier this month the NIO confirmed to us that the DoH were ‘on track’ to implement SAZs by the end of the month. This came after a few days of signage outside Causeway Hospital, which was removed as quickly as it was erected.  We are pleased to see a statement from the DoH today, 25th September, that they SAZs will be in place by the end of this week, the 29th September.

However, given the winding road we’ve had to get here we aren’t celebrating just yet.
The Abortion Services (Safe Access Zones) Act (Northern Ireland) 2023 came into force in May after a 6 month lead in period. Despite having time to prepare, 2 months after this The Department said ‘detailed preparation work has been ongoing for a number of months, including mapping and signage arrangements’ however they were still ‘finalising a policy statement on Safe Access Zones as part of the preparations for their introduction.’ Today’s announcement means they will just meet their earlier promise made on 3rd July 2023 to introduce SAZ by the end of September.

This slow movement from the Department means that women and pregnant people accessing health care, and the staff providing it, have continued to be harassed and intimidated despite Safe Access Zone legislation. 

Outstanding commitments

Abortion services are still not commissioned.

While Conscientious Providers are doing their best to rejig resources so that each Trust can provide Early Medical Abortion with pills, this is precarious. Lack of commission means a lack of funding, training, and staff. We’ve seen services collapse before in Trusts as hard working staff take the leave they are entitled to, this is unacceptable for workers and patients alike. 

The Department of Health refuse to provide a central online information point for those needing abortions. While the NIO and some individual Trusts are doing what they can to provide information, some women and pregnant people are still ending up at Stanton Healthcare who continue to provide misinformation, harass and traumatize women; at times deliberately engaging them until past the 9 weeks 6 days cut off. 

Accessing abortion care currently means contacting the Central Booking Line via phone or web form, waiting for them to contact you to arrange an appointment, and then waiting for the appointment. It is a lot of waiting to fit into around 10 weeks! We’ve been contacted by people waiting up to 2 weeks for a call back, and then 5 weeks for an appointment. BPAS are doing what they can to meet demand but are under pressure with resources given that abortions in England have also increased by 17% on this time last year.

The process for surgical abortion or those after 12 weeks is even harder to navigate. Due to a lack of guidelines, and ongoing criminalisation of healthcare providers in the regulations, people are being sent for second opinions or having their request for an abortion assessed by a panel of doctors. Manual Vacuum Aspiration is being progressed in one Trust but we have no specifics on when it will be available, or to what gestation.

We need commissioned and resourced abortion services, managed at a local level, supported by the introduction of telemedicine. 

We need an end to the criminalisation of doctors, midwives and nurses.

We need the 2020 regulations as a minimum. 

No care at home

The UK Government have released figures for January - June 2022.

These figures show that 96 women and pregnant people traveled from NI to England for abortion, 4 a week, 1 every other day.

This includes 3 under 16s, and 3 aged 16 or 17;  6 minors had to travel to England. 

They should have been treated here.
Around a third of those who traveled were under 10 weeks. Were they living in a Trust where services had collapsed? Did they need a surgical abortion due to a medical condition? 

They should have been treated here.
15 were over 20 weeks. Had they found something out at their ‘big scan’, and the doctor was too worried about criminalisation? 

They should have been treated here.

What’s next?

Maybe the Department will have crossed all their Ts and dotted their Is soon, and we will be able to celebrate not too long after International Safe Abortion Day that we have Safe Access Zones that can actually be enforced.

Maybe We’ll have commissioned, resourced, locally available abortion services by the end of 2023.

Maybe then no one else will have to travel.

In any event our Doulas will continue to support people who self manage their abortion, our website will continue to have the most up to date information, and we will continue to advocate for those who need us too - whether they have complex medical needs, are an asylum seeker in contingency accommodation, or have been misled by so called ‘crisis pregnancy centers’.

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tags: Northern Ireland, SOSNI
categories: Legislation, Campaigning, Provision
Monday 09.25.23
Posted by Emma Campbell
 

TIMELINE OF ABORTION IN NI by Jayne McCormack →

Jayne McCormack’s summary

Read more

categories: Legislation, Community, Campaigning
Friday 06.10.22
Posted by Emma Campbell
 

Safe Access Zones

Abortion Services (Safe Access Zones) Bill - Passed the consideration stage with a 2/3 Assembly majority

Read more

tags: safe access zones, press release
categories: Legislation, Provision
Thursday 03.03.22
Posted by Emma Campbell
 

Judicial Review by SPUC dismissed

Alliance for Choice welcomes the ruling by the High Court, Belfast to dismiss the challenge to the (NI) Abortion Regualtions and reaffirm unequivocally that access to abortion is our right.

Read more

tags: law
categories: Legislation
Wednesday 02.09.22
Posted by Emma Campbell
 

PRESS RELEASE: IMMEDIATE RELEASE SECRETARY OF STATE TO DIRECT DEPT. OF HEALTH COMMISSIONING OF ABORTION SERVICES IN NI

Begins: Alliance for Choice (AFC) welcome with relief, the news that Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (SOSNI), Brandon Lewis will direct the Department of Health NI to commission a CEDAW compliant abortion service by March 2022, mandating free, safe and legal access to everyone in NI who needs it. 

Naomi Connor commented, 

‘Finally, long overdue abortion services can take their place within healthcare in Northern Ireland. We remain hopeful that people will no longer have to endure the degradation of forced travel to England or navigating a precarious and limited service.’

AFC recognise the weight of today’s intervention, but Westminster must honour the SOSNI’s obligation to step in, as the state party responsible for our rights. Stormont’s democratic dysfunction has failed to deliver on the 2019 NI Executive Formation Act, irrespective of the trauma of forced travel and human rights breaches. AFC urges the Department of Health to ensure the commissioned services proceed unimpeded and with urgency. We also welcome his call to the DoH for immediate funding support for interim provision of early medical abortion, which continues to be precarious. 

Ms Connor continued

‘Each passing day ignores the real women and pregnant people who need clear pathways to adequate abortion healthcare. Further delays and obstruction to abortion services is never acceptable to the one in three of us who require this type of healthcare.’

Emma Campbell said, ‘Whilst we now breathe a sigh of relief, we remain disappointed that whole communities are failed by their leaders on this issue. We can no longer ignore that almost 2,000 abortion seekers sought treatment in the last year from across our population. This announcement doesn’t ask those who disagree with abortion to change, they still don’t have to have one. Therefore we request respect for those who do and allow them to access healthcare in peace and dignity.’

We are vigilant to the presence of rogue pregnancy clinics and groups intent on harassing women using abortion healthcare facilities. It is therefore critical that the government should act swiftly to ensure that women and pregnant people are free from anti-choice harassment and abuse. We also would like to thank all of the outstanding medical staff in NI and England who continued to provide abortion care to us all despite the difficulties and those stand-out local leaders who have stood by us from across the political spectrum.


Contact:

AFC Co-Convenors, 

Emma Campbell 07894063965  

Naomi Connor 07505 096576

processions 1.jpg


ENDS

NOTES for EDITORS:

  1. The Abortion (Northern Ireland) (No. 2) Regulations 2020 introduced in March 2020 are designed to implement the recommendations contained in paragraphs 85 and 86 of the CEDAW Report of the inquiry concerning the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland under article 8 of the Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW Report), this includes provision for abortion in cases of severe foetal impairment. These regulations need to be implemented in full so that no pregnant person is forced to travel to England to access basic healthcare.

  2. The Committee assesses the gravity of the violations in NI in light of the suffering experienced by women and girls who carry pregnancies to full term against their will due to the current restrictive legal regime on abortion.

  3. The CEDAW Report can be found here https://www.ohchr.org/en/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=22693&LangID=E

  4. Matters relating to health and justice provisions, both of which are within devolved competence, and the incompatibility with CEDAW could have been remedied by the NI Assembly. In the absence of this however under the Good Friday Agreement (Paragraph 33(b) of Strand 1) the Westminster Parliament is to “legislate as necessary” to ensure the UK’s human rights and other international obligations are met for NI.

  5. Primary legislation was consequently passed in Westminster. Section 9 of the Northern Ireland (Executive Formation etc) Act 2019 repealed sections 58 and 59 of the Offences Against the Person Act 1861 (which criminalised abortions in NI). It also placed the Secretary of State under a legal obligation to ensure that the framework under paragraphs 85 and 86 of the CEDAW report are implemented, including a continuous and ongoing duty to make changes to NI law through secondary law Regulations to ensure such implementation.

  6. The Secretary of State consequently introduced The Abortion (Northern Ireland) (No. 2) Regulations 2020. Regulation 7 provides for termination of pregnancy in cases of “Severe fetal impairment or fatal fetal abnormality.” This is consistent with what is required by the CEDAW framework and primary legislation.

  7. Strictly speaking the primary legislation, in repealing the provisions of the 1861 Act, dealt with decriminalisation. However, Regulation 11 introduces an element of re-criminalisation for medical professionals who perform a termination deemed to be outside the terms of the Regulations. This re-criminalisation was not recommended by CEDAW. When medical professionals conduct procedures outside of the legal framework, such issues are usually dealt with administratively or through the application of professional standards, rather than through creating a criminal offence. Re-criminalisation may constitute a chill factor to providing services to which there are entitlements, in particular in a challenge to a precise diagnosis relating to severe impairment or FFA.

  8. In relation the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) Article 8 covers the ‘right to respect for private and family life’ and restrictions on the same must be ‘in accordance with the law’. This is the principle of ‘legal certainty’ which has been consistently held by the European Court of Human Rights to apply to abortion services. Put simply this means when a person has a right to an abortion in law there must be a clear way of accessing that service in practice.

tags: Westminster, SOSNI, Provision
categories: Legislation, Campaigning
Thursday 07.22.21
Posted by Emma Campbell
 

Department of Health NI figures on abortion

Words are not enough.

Alliance for Choice cautiously welcome the pressure from MPs during this week’s Parliamentary Questions and the announcement of the NIHRC action, led to Robin Walker, Minister for Northern Ireland, advising that the government are ‘considering further legislative action at Westminster’ and ‘stand ready to act’ if the Northern Ireland does not take action to commission services in line with the Regulations passed in April 2020.

However the time for ‘standing’ has long passed and the time for action is now. 

Statements of intent fall short given that despite the decriminalisation of abortion in NI in October 2019, followed by the NI Abortion Regulatory Framework in April 2020, the abortion services we need and require and nowhere near being realised. We need action and we need it now.

Recent figures, including the Department of Health, have shown that alarmingly, too many women and pregnant people are not receiving the local abortion healthcare they are entitled to, with some forced to travel to England to access services. This is compounded by the fact we are in the third wave of a pandemic and risk of contagion from variant strains of the COVID-19 virus has increased significantly.

Figures released this week from a range of sources including the Department of Health show:

  • 19 people from the South Eastern Trust area have been denied local early medical abortion provision due to the withdrawal of those services 

  • During the suspension of the early medical abortion service in Northern Trust area 88 women called the Central Access Point and requested abortion services with no local services to refer those people two

  • One international on-line provider alone has provided abortion pills for 22 women from the South Eastern Trust from beginning to mid January that they should be receiving locally through their Health Trust

  • One health professional from one Health Trust has advised that they have had to refer 11 people over a ten week gestation ‘elsewhere’ for the abortion healthcare they require.

  • Recent Freedom of Information requests obtained by Alliance for Choice have confirmed that 100s of women and pregnant people from across Northern Ireland are still being forced to travel England and seek abortions on line 

  • Statistics released from the Department of Health show that there has been a decrease in the number of people in local health trusts who have received local care in respect of serious foetal anomaly. 

For each day that passes more and more women and pregnant people are being denied the abortion healthcare they require in NI.

The time for the Minister and Secretary of State to act is NOW before any more women are failed, put at risk or pushed down the inhumane road of reproductive coercion.

tags: Westminster, Provision, abortion, laws
categories: Legislation, Provision
Monday 01.25.21
Posted by Emma Campbell
 

For #16DAYSNI we need Robin Swann to commission telemedicine... by Amy Merron

Abortion was decriminalised in October 2019 and since then the failure of Robin Swann and the Department of Health to commission services has seen women and pregnant people continuing to travel to seek abortion care that is legal here.

10 out of 26 areas in Northern Ireland have no access to early medical abortion services. The Northern Trust is the largest geographical health trust in NI and is also the most recent to have ceased provision of clinic-based early medical abortion services. Women and pregnant people in this trust now face further barriers to access will have to travel to seek the legal abortion that they could have had at home.

The current situation in Northern Ireland sees early medical abortion services only available up to 10 weeks gestation (9 weeks 6 days) despite the law stating it should be available on request up to 12 weeks gestation and the World Health Organisation recommending 13 weeks. No commissioned services mean that there has been no information published by health trusts on how and when to access services leaving women and pregnant people in the dark when it comes to making healthcare decisions.

The World Health Organisation have recognised that abortion services are essential healthcare and have stated that “abortion provision in a global pandemic should minimise facility visits and provider-client contacts through the use of telemedicine and self-management approaches.” 

During the COVID-19 pandemic the rest of the U.K. has seen improved access to abortion through telemedicine and pills-by-post services. Northern Ireland has yet again been left behind despite being the only part of the U.K. that has fully decriminalised abortion. This is due to the continued obstruction to access by the NI Executive including prominent anti-choice politicians.

Telemedicine is safe and effective and has proven to be a vital service, providing people with safety and reassurance during the ongoing pandemic. Telemedicine would allow a medical practitioner to have a consultation with the pregnant person either over the phone or online. If eligible they will be prescribed mifepristone and misoprostol which can be collected at a pharmacy, alongside instructions for how to take the medication and information on who to contact if additional support is needed.

The Department of Health has advised the public to stay at home, however, women and pregnant people are being forced to travel to a clinic to take a single pill, when they can take the further 4 pills at home 24 hours later. Travelling in a pandemic puts the pregnant person and health professionals at risk of contracting COVID-19.

Beyond the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, telemedicine will provide the modern and compassionate support which is crucial to accommodating women and pregnant people from marginalised groups. Asylum seekers, ethnic minorities, sex workers, the travelling community and LGBTQIA+ people are all disproportionately impacted by barriers to abortion services. Moreover, women and pregnant people may also have caring responsibilities, no access to transport, limited access to finances or are the victims of domestic abuse and coercive control which reduces their ability to access clinic-based care.

Alliance for Choice believes that everyone should have the right to choose, this extends to deciding between clinic-based care and self-managed abortions. Self-managed approaches use the same safe medications that are prescribed in clinics by healthcare professionals. Mifepristone and misoprostol are effective up to 98% of the time and this approach is used by millions of people around the world to safely end pregnancies up to 13 weeks with no long-term effects.

Self-managed approaches will allow us to be our own service providers removing many of the barriers to services that we currently face. Care at home enables us to have more control over our own bodies so we can be supported in ending our pregnancies safely, effectively and privately at home. Alliance for Choice have provided self-managed abortion workshops to empower, educate and inform activists and others in Northern Ireland. These workshops outline where to access the safe and legal online pills, how to take them, what to expect and who to call if there are any complications or worries.

Free, safe, legal and local abortions mean accessible services for everyone who needs them, and the continued obstruction of abortion access and reproductive justice is impacting the lives of women and pregnant people across the North.

Over the next two weeks we will be sharing how telemedicine prevents and ameliorates the impacts of gender-based violence… please link, like and share across our website and social media platforms.

categories: Campaigning, Legislation, Provision, Community, Cultural
Wednesday 11.25.20
Posted by Emma Campbell
 

Responding to the MLAs contributions to Matter Abortion Regulations 31/03/2020

Responding to the MLAs contributions to Matter Abortion Regulations 31/03/2020

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https://niassembly.tv/matter-of-the-day-abortion-regulations-tuesday-31-march-2020/

Mr Allister

Mr Allister suggested people have abortions on a ‘whim’ this is insulting to people who chose to have an abortion, and does not reflect the reality of certifications being required. Mr Allister said abortion would be uncontrolled ‘up to 12 weeks’ this is untrue, abortions must be certified by one doctor up to 12 weeks and currently the first set of pills must be taken under supervision. Mr Allister then alleged there would be abortion ‘effectively on demand’ up to 24 weeks. Again this is incorrect, after 12 weeks 2 healthcare professionals must certify that the criteria are met, namely that continuing the pregnancy would be a greater risk to the health of the pregnant person than termination.

Mr Allister commented that 79% of responses to the recent consultation were opposed to any change – From the NIOs own report 66% of those responses were linked to a single campaign. None of the professional medical bodies opposed abortion law reform.

Mr Allister then raised that the Assembly was not consulted. MLAs had the same opportunity to respond to the consultation as anyone else. This is a human rights matter, and therefore stays in the remit of Westminster.


Mr Givan

Mr Givan also raised the 79% response figure which we have already addressed. It is worth noting that reposes opposing any change were ruled out of scope.

Mr Givan suggested that abortion up to 24 weeks for any reason, we have already shown this is not the case under the regulations. Mr Givan then stated that abortion to term for disability was permitted. This is incorrect. Abortion after 24 weeks, around 2% of all abortions in worldwide figures, would only be permitted for severe foetal impairment or risk to life and health of the pregnant person. Disability is not a permitted reason.  

Mr Givan suggests’ that a ‘fine’ is not a serious enough penalty for healthcare professionals acting outside the regulations. This is not simply a fine, but a criminal conviction likely to lead to being struck off. It is intended to be a punitive measure, and we oppose any criminalisation of abortion. We would again state that Human Rights are not a solely devolved matter. Westminster had the power and duty to legislate. 

Mr Givan suggests his views are in line with the ‘will of the people’. The NI Life and Times Survey show this is he is mistaken the vast majority support abortion law reform, the 1000s who have travel for abortion also show that this attitude is nothing more than NIMBYism.

Mr Frew

Mr Frew again mentioned the 79% response figure, which we have addressed above, this is mainly from one coordinated anti choice campaign. These responses were not ignored, they simply did not engage with the questions at play.

Mr Frew suggests that he will try and reverse the introduction of regulations. This would be a breach of the Human Rights of those who need abortions. These regulations have been introduced by Westminster legislation, as the body responsible for upholding human rights. It is not in Stormont’s gift to overturn the primary legislation which repealed Section 58 and 58 of the 1981 Offences Against the Person Act.

Mr Frew says he does not want disabled people to fear for their lives – we are not sure why he thinks abortion regulations would make disabled people fear for their lives.

Mr Frew suggests that people were content with NI having a different law than in GB. If this was the case why did 1000 people a year travel to England for abortions they supposedly disagreed with?

 

Dr Archibald

Dr Archibald spoke broadly in favour of the regulations, saying there is no way to compassionately legislate for access where pregnancy is a result of rape, this is why a 12 week unrestricted period is introduced. We agree with the spirit of this point however we know that many people pregnant as a result of a sex crime, particularly adolescents, are likely to delay seeking an abortion, and are more likely to even be aware that they are pregnant until later term. 12 weeks is not long enough for them.

 

Mr O’Toole

Mr O’Toole also spoke broadly in favour of the regulations. He said now NI is a place where abortion can be access on par with the Rest of the UK and Ireland. Unfortunately this is incorrect as both jurisdictions have introduced telemedicine and home use of both sets of abortion pills, NI still has not. 

Mr O’Toole said this was a step forward for women and girls, we agree and would add this is a step forward for anyone who can get pregnant.

 

Mr Butler

Mr Butler says it is important to consider the views of parents, particularly women – we would remind him that the majority of people who have an abortion are already parents. He suggests there needs to be sympathy for instances of fatal foetal abnormality, rape and incest. We agree, the UN CEDAW committee has called for action on specifically these circumstances, but sympathy without material action is pointless in these situations. As previously highlighted there is no way to compassionately, or ‘sympathetically’ legislate for pregnancies resulting from a sexual crime.

Mr Butler says the consultation was not adhered to – we have dealt with this previously, responses demanding no change to the law were not in the scope of the consultation.

Mr Butler, we would argue that denying care is ‘draconian’, not the regulations.
Mr Butler brings up that this is an issue for all sides of the community – it is, there is no significant difference in the number of people seeking an abortion from any one community background. 1 in 3 women worldwide will have an abortion, from all walks of life.    

Again we will remind the MLA that abortion for disability is not a permitted reason for an abortion under the regulations.

Mr Butler mentions Conscientious Objection – the regulations allow for conscientious objection on the same grounds as in GB. 

Mr Muir

Mr Muir spoke broadly in support of the regulations, noting that the Assembly had a chance to make legislation permitting abortion on more limited grounds and didn’t. Mr Muir also highlight the need for home use, which is particularly needed because of the current COVID 19 restrictions. We agree that the inability to travel has already cause real difficulties for people, none more evident that the attempted suicide of someone denied an abortion in NI and unable to travel to England.

Ms Bailey

Ms Bailey spoke broadly in support of the regulations. She noted that while there is access for many up to 12 weeks, there are still many barriers to be addressed. Ms Bailey called for the Health Minister to introduce telemedicine similar to measures in England, noting that abortion pills are on the WHO essential medicines list. She also pointed out that telemedicine protects health workers during this pandemic.

Ms Bailey said the green party ‘do not think it should ever have been a criminal matter, and we believe that any woman should be able to access an abortion as early as possible and as late as necessary.’ And we agree with this position.

Ms Bailey also mentioned the tragic situation brought to light on Monday.

Mr Carroll

Mr Carroll spoke about the reality of denying abortion care, that of the woman who tried to take her own life when unable to travel and refused care locally. We agree with Mr Carroll that  ‘abortion is fundamentally a healthcare issue. It is not a criminal issue’ however we must point out that unfortunately there is still a criminal sanction for healthcare professionals who act outside the regulations, which will likely lead to unnecessary bureaucracy for medical staff to ‘prove’ they were acting in good faith.

Mr Carroll is right that not everyone in served by the new regulations, including people in domestic violence situations and rural areas. He also called for telemedicine and home use of abortion pills, referencing WHO guidance that abortion pills are safe.

Mr Caroll points out that the NI Life and Times survey, previously referred to in our rebuttal, consistently shows support for choice and abortion law reform. 

Mr Lunn

Mr Lunn welcomed the regulations with some reservations. He particularly welcomed the 12 weeks unrestricted period as a way of providing services for people pregnant as a result of rape. Mr Lunn took issue with one element of the regulations, that of abortion for severe foetal impairment saying this was ‘immoral’. In response we would say that this wording allows for healthcare professionals to use their knowledge and expertise in helping people make an informed choice. The wording of fatal foetal abnormality is too restrictive. 

Mr Buckly said this issue transcends party lines. Indeed in there are supporters of change who have spoken publicly in every NIA party, except the DUP and TUV. Likewise the need for abortion care is not restirced to community background.

Mr Buckly rolls out the debunked idea that 100,000 people are alive in NI because of the restrictive abortion law. We ask what about the hundreds of thousands who are documented as having travelled for abortion, and the unknow numbers using abortion pills bought online or more dangerous methods?  Mr Buckly suggests he values life from beginning to end, does he value the life of the person who tried to take their own life on Monday because they were refused an abortion? Does he value the lives of the 1 in 3 women who will have an abortion?

Mr Buckly talks about protection of the most vulnerable, does this include the 12 year old who travelled for an abortion under a police escort pregnant as a result of rape by a family member?

Mr Buckly ends with a threat that the DUP will take action to roll back the regulations.

 

 

tags: Northern Ireland
categories: Legislation, Provision
Thursday 04.02.20
Posted by Emma Campbell
 

Regulations published for Northern Ireland Abortion provision amidst COVID-19

abortion provision presser.png

Alliance for Choice honour the monumental efforts of women and pregnant people, activist organisations, committed healthcare professionals, civic society and political allies that have brought about the new regulations in Northern Ireland for those who will need abortions. Though we welcome the news, it falls significantly short, especially in a time of a global pandemic. If the COVID19 crisis is to intensify as predicted, the Health Minister has a duty to sanction provision that does not jeopardise the health of women and pregnant people by forcing them to travel to clinics unnecessarily for abortions. 

Naomi Connor, Co Convenor said;

“We should not place women and pregnant people at risk of unsafe abortion when there is a scientific, safe and readily available alternative. At AFC we have heard directly that barriers and lack of access to abortion pills has led many to use dangerous alternatives. This is not a reality we wish to revisit when there is a body of scientific research that supports abortion telemedicine provision.”

Healthcare workers should not be put at risk by needlessly increasing footfall in healthcare premises when proven alternatives are readily available. Telemedicine is not only safe and effective for patients, but also serves to keep our healthcare staff safe and deployed where they are needed at such a critical time.

Emma Campbell Co-Convenor added, 

“We note the NIO has said that arrangements for funded treatment in England will still stand  “until we are confident that service provision in Northern Ireland is available to meet women’s needs”. However we are concerned they have not considered the impact on COVID-19 on both travel and the availability of abortion appointments in England as services shut down.”

The regulations make clear provision for the Health Minister to approve further places where medical abortion can be performed at any point in time. Now is that time and Minister Swann needs to ensure that this pandemic does not place women & healthcare providers at unnecessary risk. The Minister must act now, as is his charge, and as is provided for in the recent abortion guidelines to ensure this service is rolled out to women and pregnant people in NI seeking abortion healthcare


 

ENDS

-----------

Contact:

Emma Campbell 07894063965  

Naomi Connor 07505096576

Alliance for Choice 

www.alliance4choice.com

@All4Choice

Further Information

‘Where procedures can take place - terminations to be carried out in General Practitioners premises, clinics provided by a Health and Social Care (HSC) trust, and HSC hospitals, operating under the overall Northern Ireland HSC framework and women’s homes where the second stage of early medical terminations may be carried out. The Regulations also provide a power for the Northern Ireland Health Minister to be able to approve further places where medical abortion can be performed, with the power being able to be exercised at any point in time.’

A summary of key points:

- Abortion on request up to 12 weeks, certification from 1 healthcare professional. For medical abortion, home use for second pill will be permitted.

- Abortion 12-24 weeks with ground specificied in the consultation doc and ground C of the Abortion Act 1967. This is expanded upon in the explanatory notes, and in the explanatory notes which state other factors, like well being, which 'may be taken into account'. Certification of 1 doctor and 1 HCP will be needed.

- There will be a criminal, non imprisonable sanction for those HCPs who act outside of the regs, this will carry a 5k fine.

- No time gestational limit where there is a severe or fatal anomaly

- Conscientious objection will mirror Section 4 of the Abortion Act 1967 and will include a duty to refer.

- No action on safe/buffer zones

- CBS funding will continue.

- the explanatory notes can be amendment by the assembly/depts


Please contact us for a copy of the regulations.

BELOW ARE A NUMBER OF POSSIBLE CASE STUDIES

  • Someone who has tested positive and whose phase in isolation would push them over 12 weeks by the time they got to a provider. 

  • Someone who is in a high risk vulnerable group and does not feel safe to leave the house.  

  • Someone who has tried to make travel arrangements to get to England but as clinics are closing cannot get an appointment 

  • Someone on a normally low income who has lost their job due the crisis and cannot afford the additional funds that would be needed to travel

  • Someone who had an appointment in England whose flight has now been cancelled

  • Someone caring for elderly relatives or immuno-suppresed relatives in their own home and cannot risk infection.

  • A rise in intimate partner violence was recorded in China during the lockdown, this increases the likelihood of pregnancy as a result of rape and decreases the ability of an abused partner to leave the house safely.

  • An Asylum Seeker, who would normally be unable to travel, may be further restricted in access to abortion care by movements of asylum seekers within Ireland being completely restricted going forward, and similarly with visitors not being allowed any access in. If/When asylum seekers are locked down in centres due to COVID-19 they may be hindered in accessing abortion support networks and/or abortion care.

  • Someone who is in the country illegally and/ without papers; with tightening of border control internationally due to COVID-19 crisis, it may be structurally impossible for them to access abortion care within or without of Ireland, due to fear of deportation and/or imprisonment 

  • Someone who is in a high risk vulnerable group medically and/ disabled, travel may normally be restricted due to physical and financial limitations; however being known to medical and state services as high risk and/ disabled may make a case for someone not being granted exceptional orders to travel for abortion care to delimit potential exposure to COVID-19 (ie ‘for your own good’)

  • Someone who is in a high risk vulnerable group medically and/ disabled, particularly for cases over 12 weeks; if risk of threat to life of continuing pregnancy for pregnant person is already high without COVID-19 diagnosis, and if such same person were to be exposed to COVID-19, thus increasing risk to their own life, they then could be considered a major risk to their own health, and travel for abortion care denied  

  • Someone in state care, a minor, travel may be restricted on guardianship grounds to be in the best interests of the health of the child going fwd, and the lack of agency of the child in such circumstances  

tags: regulations, abortion rights, no, NIO, medical
categories: Legislation, Provision, Campaigning, Community
Wednesday 03.25.20
Posted by Emma Campbell
 

Activists across the island call for emergency measures to include abortion telemedicine

Across the Island of Ireland, we are coming to terms with social distancing, and the huge additional burden that will be placed on our healthcare systems due to the virus. In hope of easing that burden, while also ensuring everybody can access the healthcare they require - we want to highlight the option of telemedicine abortions. Legislation to allow telemedicine and home use of both abortion medicines needs urgent consideration before our health services come under severe pressure.

Read more

tags: telemedicine, pills, abortion pills, abortion rights, Ireland, Northern Ireland
categories: Provision, Legislation, Campaigning
Wednesday 03.18.20
Posted by Emma Campbell
 

Legal, safe and free abortion: reproductive rights in Argentina.

‘Sexual education to decide, contraceptives to (do not need) to abort, legal abortion to not die’ 

blog post by Marianna Espinos Blasco, current masters LLM Gender, Conflict and Human Rights student at Ulster University

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Protesting in front of the Argentine Parliament with the characteristic green handkerchief of the Campaign for the Right to Legal Abortion (20 of February 2019, photo by N. Pisarenko) Available in  https://elpais.com/sociedad/2019/02/19/actualidad/1550608297_024470.html

The struggle for ‘legal, safe and free abortion’ in Argentina took shape in 2005 within the Campaign for the Right to Legal Abortion. More than 70 women organizations mobilized all the country with the slogan ‘Sexual education to decide, contraceptives to not abort, legal abortion to not die’. The claim is asking for an integral work, requiring that the State modifies the Education, Health, Security, and Justice Systems (Senado y Cámara de Diputados, Proyecto de Ley Interrupción Voluntaria del Embarazo, 2019). Larger cultural changes in society are also on the agenda of the women’s movement. Sexual and reproductive rights are human rights and the women’s Campaign in Argentina supports that they should ‘be recognised as a basic right for all’; hence, the universal access to the public health systems must be guaranteed, considering that abortion is healthcare. The following article reviews the historical background of the abortion legal framework in Argentina until the current efforts in the Congress. The 19th of February is the first massive call in 2020 of pro-choice movement around the country for the abortion legislation.  

A brief history of Abortion in the Argentinian Criminal Code

Abortion was criminalised within the law since 1921, established in the Argentinian Criminal Code articles 85, 86, 87 and 88. It should be mentioned that, while articles 85, 87 and 88 are enlisting the different abortion offence figures and its respective penalties, article 86 references health professionals’ punishments. The abortion, performed by a qualified medical practitioner, is not punishable when:

  1. If it has been done to avoid endangering the life or health of the or mother's and if this danger cannot be avoided in other ways.

  2. If the pregnancy is the result of rape or is an attack to a disabled woman. In the second case, the consent from the legal representative will be needed to perform the abortion.  

There was a debate about these two clauses, modified with more restrictive specifications during the military dictatorship (1976 – 1983). However, an important fact happened in 2012, known as the failure ‘F.A.L’: The Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation (Corte Suprema de Justicia de la Nación, CSJN), hereinafter mentioned as the Court, recognised the right of every women victim of rape to interrupt the pregnancy. Moreover, the Court emphasised on the State obligation to give access to a fast, accessible and safe abortion procedure for such cases. The ‘F.A.L’ also opened the debate of how the role of practitioners that would not perform an abortion because of their own beliefs -also called ‘conscientious objectors’ for some health sectors. The Court expressed the compulsory guarantee to the right to abortion access.   

Another turning point was the publication in 2015 of a ‘Protocol to an Integral Attention to People with the Right to a Legal Interruption of Pregnancy’-that mentions being applicable only in the cases that the Criminal Code mentions. However, the protocol lacks ministry support, nor was there adequate implementation   strategy across the country. An interesting point from that document is the recognition of gender and sexual minorities. In the publication of 2016, there is the specification about the possibility of ‘trans males to be framed in the grounds of Article 86 of the Criminal Code’ and having ‘the right to receive the same attention as women, adolescents and girls’. The renewed publication of 2019 goes further in the interpretation of the Article 86, in terms of using an inclusive language, while mentioning that the right corresponds to ‘all the people with the capacity of getting pregnant’ and specifying ‘girls, teenagers, women, men, trans people, non-binary people, inter alia.  

The Campaign movement and the ‘Choice on Termination Pregnancy’ project

The National Campaign for the Right to a Safe, Legal and Free Abortion (Campaña Nacional por el Derecho al Aborto Legal Seguro y Gratuito), hereinafter the Campaign, was decided by more than 20.0000 women who were gathered in the XIX National Meeting of Women held in Mendoza in 2004. Thus, they decided to start the Campaign on the 28th of May (2005), the International Day of Action for Women’s Health, through more than 70 women organizations from all around the country. The Campaign elaborated a legal project for the ‘Choice on Termination Pregnancy’ (Proyecto de Ley Interrupción Voluntaria del Embarazo) and presented it for the first time in 2007 to the Chamber of Deputies. 

2018, a successful year

The ‘Choice on Termination Pregnancy’ project was presented for the seventh time in 2018. That year the social mobilization pro-choice was multitudinous, with the first pañuelazo on the 19th of February, covering green over one hundred cities around the country. It was the first time that the Executive Power included abortion in the legislative agenda and the Argentinian parliament opened the discussion.

Another interesting point was the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women -the UN body that monitors the implementation of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW)-, published the Concluding observations on the seventh periodic report of Argentina on the 23rd of November 2018. Thus, two paragraphs mention the need for a change in the abortion law in Argentina: 

9. The Committee urges the State party to initiate accountability procedures to ensure that all provinces approve protocols on the practice of non-punishable abortion, in line with the decision of the Supreme Court in 2012 and the national protocol for the comprehensive care of persons entitled to legal interruption of pregnancy (see CEDAW/C/ARG/CO/7, para. 33(b)) and to accelerate the adoption of the bill for the voluntary interruption of pregnancy increasing legal access to abortion, not only in cases of rape and risk to the life or health of the pregnant woman but also other circumstances such as incest and when there is a risk of severe fetal impairment (CEDAW/C/ARG/CO/7, para. 33(d)).

While the Committee observations are not ‘binding’, it is an important move. Firstly, it gives legitimacy to the Campaign, not only for the recognition of sexual and reproductive rights as human rights but also to see abortion as a basic healthcare service; secondly, it resonates among the international community sphere and pushes the political agenda of Argentina to modify the legal framework. 


2019: a loud voice within the Argentine Chamber of Deputies

Protest in front of the Argentine congress during the International Day of Action for Women’s Health (28th of May 2019) Available at 

https://www.nacion.com/el-mundo/interes-humano/viene-un-nuevo-intento-para-legalizar-el-aborto-en/LGR7ZTRPXBDL3OSWE67IZVBYJI/story/

The ‘Choice on Termination Pregnancy’ project was presented for the eighth time before Congress, with 70 signatures from Members of the Parliament from different blocs. The 28th of May, in coincidence with the International Day of Action for Women’s Health, there was an event in Annex C of the Chamber of Deputies. There is a summary of the act in the Deputies of Argentina website.

Among the different voices that sounded during the act, highlight the following:

  • Mónica Menini, a member of the National Campaign for the Right to Legal, Safe and Free Abortion, said that "we have come to demand a right that is a debt for women and that is a priority for public policies." She summarized: "It's a matter of human rights and social justice," 

  • Romina Del Plá (Front Left and Workers) called for the urgent discussion of the text in Congress: "We don't have time to wait because women are still dying, we have to have it treated immediately", she said. "We have to use the advantage of the election year to make it clear who we are in favour of defending the lives of girls and women and those who are in favour of clandestine abortion," Del Plá added.

  • Deputy Brenda Austin (UCR) considered that the bill "is the point of union between the green tide and the institution."

The project was discussed in the framework of the Deputies commissions, with more than 700 exhibitors and the debate lasted for four months. On June 13th there was a historic session of more than 23 hours of debate where it was approved with half sanction. However, on the 9th of August the initiative was rejected in the Senate. 

2020: the struggle continues

Practicing the choreography  "The Rapist Is You" with Las Tesis ( 17th of February 2020, photo by Nicolás Stulberg) Available at https://www.infobae.com/sociedad/2020/02/17/el-violador-sos-vos-la-version-argentina-para-exigir-aborto-legal-de-la-que-participo-claudia-pineiro/?outputType=amp-type

The 19th of February is the first pañuelazo of the 2020 and the Congress of the Nation of Argentina will be surrounded by a green tide; the protest piece of Las Tesis, "A Rapist in Your Path" - also known as "The Rapist Is You", will be performed loudly. The National Campaign for the Right to Legal, Safe and Free Abortion, that this year is on the 15th anniversary, announced the following in a press release:

‘With the handkerchief up and hands together, we will be millions demanding the approval of a Law consistent with equitable access to integral health, equal care, Complete Sex Education and the secular State. Legal abortion is a debt of democracy. It is a claim of the feminist struggle that has set the future of millions of youths in the region, who demand more rights, freedom and autonomy’.

Choice on Termination Pregnancy’ project: core pints highlighted by the Chamber of Deputies

  1. Civil society efforts: The bill was written by members of different regions of the National Campaign for the Right to Legal, Safe and Free Abortion. An articulation proposal was elaborated, which was then worked in each regional and agreed in a national plenary

  2. Grounds for abortion and gestation time limits: The text establishes the right to voluntary termination of pregnancy (IVE) up to fourteen weeks, inclusive, of the gestational process. Meanwhile, it allows IVE in cases of unwanted or unwanted pregnancy, rape product, or that affects integral health.

  3. Access timing: The IVE project also establishes that every woman or pregnant person will have the right to decide and access the practice of abortion within 5 days, in a health facility and without police or justice intervention.

  4. Who can provide services and where can be performed: Among the main points of the project, it states that health personnel must report on the methods for abortion. This information must be "objective, relevant, accurate, reliable, accessible, scientific, up-to-date and secular.

  5. Public sector coverage and Sexual Education at schools:  Likewise, the article establishes that both the public and private sectors must cover the practice 100%, as well as diagnostic, medication and therapy benefits. The text of the law also dictates that the curricular content on abortion "must be taught in public, private and social management schools as a right."

The Choice on Termination Pregnancy project is also very inclusive with sexual diversity rights. Article 3 defines that ‘women and other identities with the pregnancy capacity’ is a synonym of ‘women or pregnant person’. Moreover, article 12, which is about ‘Sexual and reproductive health policies and Complete Education’, references the compulsory training of public services in gender perspective and sexual diversity.

To conclude

The Argentina movement to legalize abortion, mainly within the Campaign, is very relevant and claims loudly to achieve abortion as a basic healthcare service. As said previously, it is important to recognize clearly, that sexual and reproductive rights are human rights. For that reason, the movement that stands for a legal, safe and free abortion, went from the streets to the Chamber of Deputies. The Choice on Termination Pregnancy project, even though pending approval, has some core points that can be used as an example in other legislation frameworks. The emerging LGBTI rights and the challenge to heterosexual and/or cisgender norms in Latin America are being addressed from several spheres and angles, being relevant for the sexual and reproductive rights improvements to be more inclusive. 

#AbortoLegal2020 #19F #ProyectoAbortoLegalYa

#QueSeaLey #Pañuelazo 

Bibliography

Argentinian Criminal Code, available in http://servicios.infoleg.gob.ar/infolegInternet/anexos/15000-19999/16546/texact.htm (in Spanish)

Campaña Nacional por el Derecho al Aborto Legal Seguro y Gratuito

http://www.abortolegal.com.ar/

Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) ‘Concluding observations’ on the seventh periodic report of Argentina (23rd of November 2018) Available at:

https://undocs.org/CEDAW/C/ARG/CO/7/ADD.1

Protocolo para la atención integral de las personas con derecho a la interrupción legal del embarazo (2016) Available at

http://www.msal.gob.ar/images/stories/bes/graficos/0000000875cnt-protocolo_ile_octubre%202016.pdf (in Spanish)

Protocolo para la atención integral de las personas con derecho a la interrupción legal del embarazo (2019) Available at http://www.msal.gob.ar/images/stories/bes/graficos/0000001792cnt-protocolo-ILE-2019-2edicion.pdf (in Spanish) 

Senado y Cámara de Diputados, Proyecto de Ley Interrupción Voluntaria del Embarazo (2019) Available at:

https://www.hcdn.gob.ar/export/hcdn/prensa/PDF/PROYECTO_DE_LEY_INTERRUPCIxN_VOLUNTARIA_DEL_EMBARAZO_2810-D-2019.pd

Summary of the Legislative debate about the Legal Abortion Project

(May 28, 2019) Available at:

https://www.diputados.gob.ar/prensa/noticias/noticias-podio/noticias_1038.html (in Spanish)

tags: Argentina, green, abortion righs, legal, grassroots, feminism, campaigning, lobbying
categories: Legislation, Campaigning
Thursday 02.20.20
Posted by Emma Campbell
 

SARAH EWART RETURNS TO COURT ONCE AGAIN

Sarah and her mum Jane in the middle, with Michelle O Neill. Grainne Teggart and Denis Phelan.

Sarah and her mum Jane in the middle, with Michelle O Neill. Grainne Teggart and Denis Phelan.

Today Sarah Ewart and her mum Jane Christie will return to the High Court in Belfast where we hope they will finally get the judgement they deserve, that Northern Ireland’s law on abortion has breached Sarah's human rights.

Read more

tags: court, Sarah Ewart, Foetal Abnormality, CEDAW, High Court
categories: Legislation
Thursday 10.03.19
Posted by Emma Campbell
 

Penny Mordaunt letter to Maria Miller on abortion info in NI

Penny Morduant’s Letter to Maria Miller after the Women and Equalities Inquiry

Read more

tags: abortion, leg, Government
categories: Legislation
Tuesday 04.09.19
Posted by Emma Campbell
 

The British-Irish InterGovernmental Conference

joint letter logos.png

Emma Campbell, Co-Chair of Alliance for Choice said:
 
“We are horrified that children as young as 12 are still being forced to travel to access medical services. This is indicative of the callousness with which the DUP and others blocking change in the defunct NI Assembly continue to treat us. We have reached a point where the stance of those unwilling to change is not supported by their voters or by any health or human rights bodies. More importantly, the stigma it creates is recognised as harming the physical and mental wellbeing of abortion seekers and their families. ”

Read more

tags: coalition, Westminster, Ireland, Repeal, repeal 58 59
categories: Legislation
Thursday 07.26.18
Posted by Emma Campbell
 

Northern Ireland Office leak reveals more than briefing notes

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Alliance for Choice have noted that neither the Supreme Court nor CEDAW are satisfied that these arrangements in any way relieve Westminster from their duty to act as noted in the summary of the CEDAW report in February this year.

Read more

tags: Westminster, Secretary of State, Karen Bradley, Tories, 1861, abortion
categories: Legislation, Campaigning
Monday 06.18.18
Posted by Emma Campbell
 

YES for Ireland

afc at mfc.jpg

YES! The ringing, resounding, confirming, affirming, positive joy of a yes. “Yes” to a new beginning in Ireland’s relationship with its women and pregnant people. “Yes” to compassion and care and change. “Yes” to the truth of every abortion story and its individual worth. “Yes” to never letting one more woman die because you will no longer say, “This is a Catholic Country”.

Read more

tags: YES, referendum, repeal the 8th, votes, what now
categories: Legislation, Campaigning, Cultural, Provision, Community
Saturday 05.26.18
Posted by Emma Campbell
 

Alliance for Choice on Secretary of State Northern Ireland's response to parliamentary question on abortion from Stella Creasy MP.

Alliance for Choice were pleased to see the issue of abortion raised in Parliamentary Questions today by Labour MP Stella Creasy. However we were extremely disappointed with the response from Secretary of State for Northern Ireland Karen Bradley.

Co-Chair Emma Campbell said, “We know from a number of opinion polls, and academic research such as the Northern Ireland Life and Times Survey and the Abortion as a Workplace issue report, that the majority of people in Northern Ireland want to see criminal sanctions removed from abortion.”

Read more

tags: Westminster, Labour Party, England, Stella Creasy
categories: Legislation
Wednesday 05.09.18
Posted by Emma Campbell
 

Vote for Repeal action

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Belfast Solidarity

At 5:30pm on the 8th March 2018,..

At 5:30pm on the 8th March 2018 at Belfast City Hall, Alliance for Choice have a solidarity rally with the Votes for Repeal march in Dublin. On International Women’s Day 2018 there is a march in Dublin from the Garden of Remembrance to the Dáil in what we hope will be the last march before we repeal the Eighth Amendment from the Irish Constitution. We are rallying in solidarity with the march along with events in Derry, Cork, Galway, and more.

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tags: protest, solidarity, repeal the 8th, Votes for Repeal, abortion rights
categories: Campaigning, Legislation
Thursday 03.08.18
Posted by Emma Campbell
 

Sector ask Amber Rudd for full abortion access in Northern Ireland

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Dear Rt Hon Amber Rudd MP,

...

Dear Rt Hon Amber Rudd MP, 
We write on behalf of those who use, provide and campaign for abortion care provision to call on you to legislate for full abortion access in Northern Ireland without further delay. 50 years after the passing of the 1967 Abortion Act, women* living in Northern Ireland are still being forced through pregnancies against their will.

*We recognise that not all pregnant people are women and that trans men and non-binary people can get pregnant too. This letter refers to pregnant people of all genders.

Read more

tags: abortion rights, UK, Northern Ireland, Stella Creasy, Government, secto
categories: Legislation, Provision
Wednesday 03.07.18
Posted by Emma Campbell
 
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