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Abortion in Australia

New frontiers in repressing dissent.

Life Network Australia - Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Written by Mishka Gora - MercartorNet.

Used with permission.

Tasmania may be small, but it will punch far above its weight on the world stage in shutting down protests against abortion if a new bill is passed.

Tasmanians learned on Friday, International Women’s Day, that abortion is to be decriminalized. This left many confused. Some took it to mean that abortion is currently illegal; others wondered if the State Government had somehow “lost” the amendments to the criminal code that legalized abortion, at any stage of gestation, in 2001.
 
Abortion has effectively been legal in Australian states for more than 40 years, although it has remained in the criminal code. The number of prosecutions in all that time can be counted on one hand. So why the sudden enthusiasm for decriminalization?
 
Because the real aim of the Labor-Green coalition which is running Tasmania is to criminalize abortion dissent . With only two weeks for the public to respond, the Health Minister, Michelle O’Byrne, has drafted what may be most draconian abortion law anywhere.
 
The neighbouring state of Victoria decriminalized abortion in 2008. Ms O’Byrne says that this is the model for her bill. But the Victorian bill contains no penalties for conscientious objectors; the Tasmanian bill does. The Victorian bill doesn’t mention counsellors; the Tasmanian bill threatens counsellors with jail. The Victorian bill doesn’t mention protests; the Tasmanian bill threatens protesters with jail.
 
If this bill passes, a part-time volunteer counsellor for an organization supporting pregnant women could be jailed for a year and fined up to A$65,000 if she refuses to refer a woman to a place where she can get an abortion. The bill’s definition of a counsellor includes anyone who gives “advice or information relating to pregnancy options” and “whether or not for fee or reward”. Overnight, all agencies which disagree with abortion will be forced to shut down.
 
Medical practitioners will be obliged under threat of a $65,000 fine to make referrals if they have a conscientious objection. To anyone who believes that an unborn child has a right to life making a referral means cooperating with evil. The proposed laws are coercing participation in the overall process of abortion procurement.
 
Nurses who refuse to participate in abortions could be fined $65,000.
 
The right to peaceful protest will also be shut down. The bill imposes a 300-metre-wide exclusion zone around abortion clinics. The maximum penalty is 12 months in jail and a $65,000 fine.
 
In the heart of the Hobart CBD a dingy, anonymous-looking building houses an abortion clinic. The exclusion zone incorporates not only four major thoroughfares (where protests and parades have traditionally taken place) but also Hobart’s busiest Catholic church and the Anglican cathedral. A priest preaching against abortion in his own church, or participants in a prayer vigil, or someone wearing a pro-life T-shirt while walking through the city, or a photographer taking candid shots of street life could all be arrested. In Launceston, the other major city in Tasmania, the exclusion zone includes part of a Catholic hospital and a major park.
 
To make matters worse, the prohibited activity includes intimidating, protesting or photographing, and “any other prescribed [sic] behaviour”. The sloppy wording, in combination with an open-ended section on regulations, could be used to punish innocent activity.
 
The Health Minister has been quite disingenuous about the scope and purpose of her bill in her statements to the media. She has mentioned none of these tyrannical measures and has given the public a mere two weeks to respond to one of the most far-reaching pieces of abortion legislation ever proposed anywhere.
 
What about doctors and nurses?
 
Although not required to perform abortions in normal circumstances, doctors and nurses are placed under a “duty to treat” if a pregnant woman is deemed to be at risk of serious injury. This means that doctors who believe it is best to treat the symptoms arising from pregnancy or to terminate the pregnancy via caesarean section or induction rather than an abortion would be forced to directly destroy a human embryo or foetus against their conscience and better judgment. It also means that Catholic hospitals will be required to offer abortion as a treatment option.
 
Sloppy drafting in the bill creates a range of potential problems. It extends the time that an abortion may be procured without specialist consultation to 24 weeks. This means that surgical abortions will not require a surgeon, thus decreasing the safety of the procedure.
 
The section protecting medical practitioners could, furthermore, be interpreted to allow abortions against a woman’s consent if it is deemed “for the woman’s benefit”. Termination has been so vaguely defined that the medical procedures of induction and caesarean section are included, potentially making elective caesareans technically illegal.
 
The removal of Section 165 of the criminal code (which applies to circumstances other than abortion) opens a can of worms. It removes the protection for anyone (other than doctors) administering first aid to a pregnant woman in good faith; it abolishes the reduced charge of infanticide for women suffering from post-natal depression; and it replaces the words “death of a child before birth” with the dehumanising euphemism “pregnancy termination”, even though the Births, Deaths and Marriages Registration Act 1999 requires notification of stillborn children (which includes an aborted foetus after 20 weeks) and their cause of death.
 
The spectre of “backyard abortions” has also been raised. The bill specifies that a woman who performs an abortion on herself is not guilty of a crime or any other offence. This means that abortions outside of the requirements laid down in the Reproductive Health Act, ie, unlawful abortions, will nevertheless be lawful for women self-administering an abortion, even though they may have no medical qualifications.
 
This inconsistency, deeming anyone who performs an abortion other than a doctor guilty of a criminal offence except if that person happens to be the pregnant mother, creates a dangerous temptation for desperate pregnant women and sets an alarming precedent.
 
The reasons behind this new legislation are also worrying. It is clearly aimed at allowing terminations on grounds that are not apparent prior to 12 weeks. Indeed, the Health Minister cited genetic abnormalities at the 20-week mark as a motivation for the change. This is blatant discrimination, and it sends the message that discrimination on such grounds as gender or disability is socially and legally acceptable. An accompanying information paper also blurs the distinction between abortion and contraception, extending the right of choosing when to reproduce (or not) to include abortion (which unlike contraception takes place after reproduction has occurred).
 
Tasmanian legislators are being offered a choice between abortion at any stage and abortion at any stage plus criminalizing dissent. The minister wants to make abortion a health matter, not a criminal matter. But she wants to achieve this at the expense of freedom of conscience, freedom of speech, and common sense. After all, if it is a crime to perform an abortion without medical qualifications or a woman’s consent, shouldn’t it be in the criminal code? The law as it stands is quite sufficient, and to alter it is nothing less than tyrannical.
 
Mishka Gora is a Tasmanian writer specialising in matters relating to war, conscience, and the former Yugoslavia. She is the media representative for Human Rights for the Unborn – Tasmania.

What can you do?

Please respond - send an email to public.health@dhhs.tas.gov.au opposing the proposed abortion laws in Tasmania.  Submissions close on March 22, so please act quickly!

Say that you oppose the proposal because it would:

• allow abortion of babies who are capable of being born alive.
• legalise the brutal partial birth abortion method (banned in the U.S)

• remove the protection of the law from all unborn children in Tasmania right up to birth.
• not provide any support for women who are under pressure to abort from partners or others. Women coerced in this way may regret their abortions for the rest of their lives.
• force all health professionals to facilitate abortion - or be fined up to $65000. It robs them of freedom of conscience.

Related articles:

ACL's Dan Flynn on proposed changes to abortion laws in Tasmania here

March for the Babies a huge success.

Life Network Australia - Thursday, October 18, 2012

Wow...what a great day!

Melbourne's CBD virtually came to a standstill as a few thousand pro lifers marched through it's streets.  The March was held on Saturday, October 13, to remember the lives lost by abortion since the 2008 abortion law reform, and to advocate for babies, women and families by seeking the reinstatement of protection for them.

Many thanks to Bernie Finn and the March for the Babies committee for the hours and hours of work you have put in to making this march the success it was.

A number of people have posted pictures and footage on facebook and others have written articles about the day, which included obscene behaviour from pro abortion protestors. We have included them here for anyone who was unable to attend.

It was a great day, and we encourage you to put the date, October 12, on your calendar for next years March. Closer to the date, we will run a 'Bring a Friend' campaign, so please keep in mind who you might invite.

Happy viewing :) 

Footage of the March

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ou8wZweswdM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ne0jrEX9t7M

Ninemsn video http://video.au.msn.com/watch/video/royal-at-abortion-protest/xy6u62d?cpkey=3db3c3d3-9867-4220-a739-9da7a703788f%7C%7C%7C%7C

Yahoo 7 News http://au.news.yahoo.com/video/national/watch/87a7285b-4507-3675-a407-13dce89bd8a5/anti-abortion-protests-break-out/

Youth for Life Australia http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Fshc___G84&sns=em

Articles -

The Craigazette (includes great pictures of the day) http://craigazette.digitalbling.com.au/?p=2701

Bill Muehlenberg http://www.billmuehlenberg.com/2012/10/13/abortion-public-discourse-and-the-media/

The Aristophrenium  http://aristophrenium.com/mathew/pro-choice-is-pro-life-or-so-the-logic-goes/#comment-683745231

 

The following letter was published in The Australian:

Letters - Abortion not settled
• From: The Australian
• October 23, 2012 12:00AM
IT is disturbing to learn Arthur Sinodinos, a senator in federal parliament, thinks such a life and death issue as abortion is a "settled" matter ("McTernan is the PM's high priest of negative campaigning", 18/10) - especially a day after scenes of the largest, youngest and most vibrant protest against abortion in years.
Melbourne's March for the Babies attracted an estimated 3500 protestors calling for the restoration of protection for unborn children. In 2008 the Brumby Labor government deprived these hapless children of the right to be born right up to birth. The message from these protesters was clear - enough is enough. Surely a federal parliamentarian cannot believe his fellow Australians accept the annual abortion carnage of 100,000 young Australians?
Thomas Jefferson believed the first responsibility of government was to protect human life. What does Sinodinos think he is doing sitting up in parliament if he is not doing this?
There is nothing bizarre in the recognition of the right to life of an unborn child. The Leader of the Opposition recognises it. If abortion was a settled matter, Tony Abbott wouldn't be causing the pro-abortion sisterhood such angst.

Denise M. Cameron, president, Pro Life Victoria (Inc) East Brunswick, Vic

 

 

Alarming statistics for late term abortions in Victoria, Real Choices Australia media release.

Life Network Australia - Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Media Release: Victorian late term abortion figures

By Debbie Garratt, Director of Real Choices Australia.

The 2009 Annual Report of the Consultative Council on Obstetric and Paediatric Mortality and Morbidity was released last month and details the growing numbers of late term abortions being undertaken in Victoria.

From a total of 410 post 20 week abortions, 210 were performed on physically healthy babies, with 10 ofthese undertaken after 28 weeks, a time when these babies could have been safely delivered alive and thepsychosocial concerns of their mothers addressed.

Over a ten year period from 1999 – 2009 late term abortions in Victoria grew from 66 to 410, with more than half of these being undertaken for psychosocial reasons in every year since 2004 (2007 being an exception).

The 2009 figures show an even more disturbing increase, that is the number of very late term abortions on healthy, viable babies for maternal psychosocial reasons.
Most of the general public continue to believe that late term abortions are only undertaken when women are seriously ill and their lives are threatened, or when their babies have no hope of survival and will die a more horrific death if allowed to come to term. Neither of these is true.

Most remain ignorant of the reality that women continue to be offered surgical solutions to their economic, social, relational, and mental health problems rather than positive solutions to address their circumstances, even when they are at a stage of pregnancy when their babies could be safely delivered alive.

The international research clearly demonstrates that up to 30% of women suffer serious and prolonged mental health problems after abortion with women having later term abortions being at higher risk than those having abortions at early gestations.
Research further indicates that the majority of women undergoing abortion do so feeling as if they have no other choice, forced to choose between their unborn and their jobs, or their education, or their partners or family support. This is not choice for women. This is coercion wrapped up in a tidy ‘safe and common surgical’ package that denies women the right to genuine and supported options.

Real Choices Australia rejects the idea that abortion is ever in a woman’s best interests or that surgical or medical solutions to women’s social, economic, or relational problems in the absence of genuine, supported alternatives can ever be considered a free choice.

Victorian abortion laws - Amendments rejected 2008.

Life Network Australia - Friday, April 20, 2012

Please find following a list of amendments that were rejected when the Victorian Brumby Government legalised abortion up until birth. While there were some 60 amendments, this is a shorter list of those which reveal the cruel intention of those that voted to make abortion legal on demand.

 The following list is from the Life Voteflyer (page 2)

In October 2008, the Victorian parliament voted to make abortions legal,
right up to the day of birth, no counselling required.

Yet:
98% of Australians believe that women should be advised
of the health risks of abortion*
99% want support-counselling for women*
87% want the number of abortions reduced*

Despite this, the Victorian Parliament voted down amendments to help women
in crisis. They voted:
*Against providing support-counselling for women. [VicHansard 3536-3550]
*Against providing information on the health risks of abortion. [VicHansard 3629-3631]
*Against the right of healthcare workers not to participate in abortion or refer for abortion. [VicHansard 4245-4264]
*Against banning late-term and partial-birth abortion. [VicHansard 3498-3506]
*Against mandatory reporting of suspected child/teenage victims of sexual abuse when a suspected abuser takes them to an abortion clinic. [VicHansard 3492-3498]
*Against notifying the custodial parent of a minor seeking an abortion
[VicHansard 3480-3485]
*Against requiring abortionists to provide an anaesthetic to the unborn child being aborted. [VicHansard 3625-3639]
*Against protecting the life of a child born alive after an abortion.
[VicHansard 3620-3629]
*Against providing legal protection for an unborn child seriously injured during an assault on the mother. [VicHansard 3474-3480]

 

* Giving Women a Choice: Australia Speaks on Abortion, Southern Cross Bioethics Institute, 2005. 

Related footage:

Babies born alive and left to die: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y3WHP7Q5dp8

Change the law: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7p4LVSmKx5M 

What do the public know? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yOkPX9c_964&feature=relmfu

 

 

Ethicists working with Australian universities argue for abortions of newborns.

Life Network Australia - Tuesday, February 28, 2012

The Blaze (Feb 27, 2012) has reported that "Two ethicists working with Australian universities argue in the latest online edition of the Journal of Medical Ethics that if abortion of a fetus is allowable, so to should be the termination of a newborn".

The two ethicists are Alberto Giubilini, working with Monash University in Melbourne and Francesca Minerva (at the Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics) at the University of Melbourne. They write that in “circumstances occur[ing] after birth such that they would have justified abortion, what we call after-birth abortion should be permissible.”

The article says that they "are quick to note that they prefer the term “after-birth abortion“ as opposed to ”infanticide.” Why? Because it “[emphasizes] that the moral status of the individual killed is comparable with that of a fetus (on which ‘abortions’ in the traditional sense are performed) rather than to that of a child.”

Giubilini and Minerva also "do not agree with the term 'euthanasia' for this practice as the best interest of the person who would be killed is not necessarily the primary reason his or her life is being terminated. In other words, it may be in the parents’ best interest to terminate the life, not the newborns."

They also state that "The circumstances, where after-birth abortion should be considered acceptable include instances where the newborn would be putting the well-being of the family at risk, even if it had the potential for an “acceptable” life". The example they go on to give is in the case of a baby with Downs Syndrome: "while the quality of life of individuals with Downs is often reported as happy, “such children might be an unbearable burden on the family and on society as a whole, when the state economically provides for their care.”

The article goes on to say that "Giubilini and Minerva believe that being able to understand the value of a different situation, which often depends on mental development, determines personhood" and that "Both a fetus and a newborn certainly are human beings and potential persons, but neither is a ‘person’ in the sense of ‘subject of a moral right to life’.

They do not comment on when the baby becomes a "person".

The National Catholic Register highlighted that the two ethicists position "is almost pro-life in that it highlights the absurdity of the pro-abortion argument”.  

Life Network Australia supports their statement: "The second we allow ourselves to become the arbiters of who is human and who isn’t, this is the calamitous yet inevitable end. Once you say all human life is not sacred, the rest is just drawing random lines in the sand".

 Is it really any wonder we have arrived at this alarming discussion?!

Given that: Babies can now be legally aborted up until birth in Victoria; that the state government continues to ignore the plight of babies being born alive (after "failed abortions") and left to die; and the inaction of the vast majority who know about this but do nothing - it was only a matter of time.

If we have any hope of preventing live babies from being killed on demand in Victoria and Australia, now is the time to act to wind back the current abortion laws, which already allows for infanticide (babies who survive failed abortions - as recorded in the Victorian Health Department's own 'Infant mortality and morbidity' Reports).

Again I urge you to please contact:

 Vic Premier, Ted Baillieu ted.ballieiu@parliament.vic.gov.au  

Health Minister, David Davis david.davis@parliament.vic.gov.au and politely ask them to change the law to reinstate protection for babies and their mothers.

Please also get involved with a pro life organisation of your choice and with pro life action (see the LNA website for ideas) to fight against this cruel abuse of our unborn (and born) - and their mothers. 

While some might argue that this would never be allowed to happen, who would ever have thought abortion up until birth would? And yet, here we are...the conversation has begun!

Related article by Bill Muehlenberg - comments welcome: http://forum.onlineopinion.com.au/thread.asp?article=13312 

Andrew Bolt's blog: http://blogs.news.com.au/heraldsun/andrewbolt/index.php/heraldsun/comments/on_lawfully_killing_small_babies/

 Sydney Morning Herald: http://whadu.com/?q=sydney+morning+herald+abortion+birth 

http://news.ninemsn.com.au/national/8428050/melbourne-abortion-author-gets-death-threats

 

 

Qld Premier Bligh to 'go for broke' - under pressure from abortion lobby?

Life Network Australia - Thursday, October 27, 2011

The Australian Family Association (AFA) have indicated that they "expect a private members bill to decriminalise abortion to full-term before the end of 2011". 

"With an election due by early June 2012, (April/May most likely) the Premier of Queensland Anna Bligh, is under intense pressure from the abortion lobby to allow debate in parliament on abortion.

According to the AFA, "Premier Bligh has stated repeatedly she supports the full decriminalisation of abortion.  As a member of EMILY's list, it is no surprise as the Premier is simply following orders.  All EMILY's list supporters (www.emilyslist.org.au) must also vote according to the goals and objectives of EMILY's list".

Even Emily List's leaders themselves have defended Bligh from the attack of the abortion lobby. In an article ('Blaming women not the answer to abortion law reform') Hutch Hussein (National Co-Convenor of EMILY’s List Australia) and Tanja Kovac (National Co-ordinator) said that "A number of women in the Queensland parliament enjoy our support and we have no reason to question their loyalty to change". They added that "Blaming Queensland Premier Anna Bligh, or anyone of our supporters, for failing to reform a piece of legislation that pre-dates even the right of women to vote is counter-productive to affecting change in the best interests of women, and the partners who support them".

Hussein and Kovac, of Emily's List, also described the patience required to implement open slather abortion legislation: "Incremental change is not popular – calling for revolution when it can’t be delivered makes for more interesting television. But incremental change –law reform inquiries, private members bills requiring conscience votes, consensus building and other boring, but essential steps needed to take people with you on a journey for change - is what makes for lasting behavioural and social transformation. This is why progressive women, like Premier Bligh, need two things -  firstly, the people of Queensland to elect more progressive MPs into their parliament and, secondly, the support of women’s movement and the community sector and the press to take a greater interest in the institutional structures that work to limit women’s control over their own bodies".

Hussein and Kovac also advised Emily List supporters to "Be clear on who the enemies of Reproductive Freedom are and direct our energies accordingly".

It would appear now that as Bligh's term as Premier may be coming to an end, with an election due early next year - that the abortion lobby is demanding Bligh 'go for broke' on legalising abortion up until birth. 

ACT NOW:The AFA urges all Queenslanders to contact their state MP to express their concern. Find your MP here

Life Network Australia asks that everyone opposed to the current Victorian legislation also act quickly to make contact with Queensland MPs and express our opposition. 

Related Articles:

Emily's List  

Abortion Fetish of Professionals

Abortion nightmare in Victoria


 

Hear first hand from the architects of the Vic abortion legislation - DVD footage.

Life Network Australia - Saturday, August 20, 2011
A "pro choice" DVD has been released that features the architects of the barbaric Victorian abortion legislation of 2008. It is well worth taking the time to hear the arguments that convinced the majority of politicians in Victorian Parliament that day and to take a brief look at the characters and portfolios of a few of the "main players".
 The footage is 25 minutes long, but is a great insight into the arguments that were used. It also demonstrates the coordination and collaboration that was required to pull off such a feat, something pro lifers must learn from if we are to have any impact at all. The pro life movement is driven by outstanding groups and individuals, but it is imperative that we work together consistently to pool information, resources, ideas and enthusiasm.
Listed are a few arguments (not in any particular order) that came to mind as I watched the footage - feel free to post your own thoughts, comments and ideas under the article in the feedback section.

DVD footage here
 
The most outstanding and shocking aspect of this dvd is that there was not a single mention of the babies who lose their lives every day in Victoria (60 babies) and Australia (250). 
 
There is so much misinformation in the footage, that it is difficult to know where to begin - information that many blindly accept and rhetoric that remains unchallenged and which contributes to the culture of abortion we have in Australia today. 
  
The frequently used (but baseless) argument about the "droves of women" that supposedly died from backyard abortions is rolled out again on this DVD. According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, in 1969 when the Menhennit Ruling was passed, one woman in all of Australia died from a "backyard abortion" -  While sad, does it justify where we are today? Furthermore, it was the invention of antibiotics that stopped those rare cases of backyard abortion in which women died.  Oddly, pro abortion advocates claim they want to eradicate backyard abortions, but the same people fought in Federal Parliament for women to have access to the RU486 pill...for women to go home and have abortions by themselves!!  The inconsistency is baffling. 
 
It was claimed that those who drove the legalisation of abortion in Victoria had the media on side. This explains why the same media outlets are happy to show images of cows in Indonesian slaughter houses, but not the brutal procedures that end the lives of Australian babies in the womb - 250 of which are done every day in Australia. Pro life advoates are all too familiar with the media's biased reporting on abortion issues (with, of course, the rare exception).
 
In the footage, Colleen Hartland (from the Greens Party) is featured. At the time of the abortion debate, an interview with Colleen Hartland was shown on ' 9am with David and Kim' (no longer televised). During this one sided interview, Colleen argued why abortion should be legal - because of the difficult situation she experienced many years earlier, with her boyfriend, when faced with an unplanned pregnancy, and the guilt she experienced as a result of having an illegal abortion..
This description made me wonder at the time.."How many women attribute this guilt and grief to abortion being illegal, rather than to the grief of losing their baby?". Also "Why is there such a lack of support for women like Colleen, that abortion becomes a "necessary evil"? The phrase "Women deserve better than abortion" is certainly relevant to Ms Hartland.
Do Victorian women now feel a sense of relief, satisfaction and contentment after an abortion now - because it is "legal"?
 
The argument that this abortion legislation was needed to "catch up" to what was already happening in society lacks any substance. You might liken it to making the claim that "teenagers are drinking at a younger age, so let's lower the drinking age (play 'catch up')". In fact, there is often discussion and debate about raising the drinking age, taxing sugary alcoholic drinks and other measures to counteract the problem. Yet, when it comes to killing the unborn, we simply make it "open slather" ... crazy logic and yet it was so influential on many MP's who voted.  
 
None of the speakers make any mention of follow up care for women after abortion or how the legislation would protect women, babies and families...because it doesn't, in any way, shape or form! There is no mention on the DVD of the 60 odd amendments designed to protect women and babies that were rejected outright. These amendments included: mandatory reporting of suspected sexual abuse; parental consent for minors (needed for piercings); a cooling off period for women considering late term abortion; support/ counselling for women considering abortion; banning of partial birth abortion (banned in the U.S); anaesthetic for late term babies being aborted; the provision of medical care for babies born alive; limitting abortion access to 20 weeks, then 24 weeks.  The rejection of these amendments is nothing short of negligence - it represents abuse of babies and their mothers. For the most common female procedure (one in three women), it is now the most under-regulated.
When challenged about this, one director of a women's health clinic in country Victoria stated that she "has faith in the medical system" - this is just not good enough!
 
Note the numerous images of banners with religious messages, references to the Church, Tony Abbott's faith etc...the pro abortion industry thrives on this discrimination and stereotyping. It is not uncommon for Church groups to be denied function venues on the grounds of the abortion topic being "political and religious", or advertisments for newspapers rejected on the same grounds. So much for freedom of speech and religion! This legislation endorses those views of intolerance and discrimination, as can be seen on the DVD.
 
Another flawed argument presented is that this legislation recognises women as being capable of making decisions for themselves - we can't do that without access to open slather abortion!? Abortion is still illegal in most states and many of us are more than capable of making our own decisions.
 Why does our autonomy as women come down to this single issue...the "trophy" of women's rights?!  If a woman were to be unable to access abortion, does that mean that she is incapable of participating in society with self determination? Of course not!  Many, many amazing women throughout history have influenced Australia's development...and all without legalised and open slather abortion!

International research shows that some 60% of women who have abortions experience some form of coercion. Other research shows that many women experience varying degrees of post abortion regret and/or grief - for some it is devastating.  To state that "legalised abortion recognises that women can make their own decisions" is over simplistic and does not take factors of coercion (in theory or practice) into account. What is not considered or mentioned are the pressures on women to abort and how this decision impacts them. This line of argument may also undermine a woman's entitlement and perhaps ability to feel that she was 'ripped off' by abortion and that she should feel grateful for having had the "choice".
 
The statement by Dr. Lachlan De Crespigny about abortion being difficult to access is simply untrue - and contradicts the argument that this legislation is playing "catch up" to practice - they can't have it both ways!.
When I went to confirm my own unexpected pregnancy, the first thing the Dr asked was whether I wanted to continue or terminate my pregnancy - that was in a rural country town 15 years ago.  Discussions with other women reveal similar experiences - with one friend saying that her doctor advised her to have an abortion rather than getting her tubes tied, as it was "a simpler procedure". Furthermore, abortion is far easier to access than adoption or pregnancy/parenting support. See for yourself - phone an adoption agency and ask them what the process for making an adoption plan is!
 
Dr Lachlan De Crespigny, who appears in the DVD, seems to have a long and vested interest in legalised abortion up until birth. In fact, it was the results of his survey on late term abortion that were published in newspapers all over Australia earlier this year, a survey that lacked any kind scrutiny.  It was also a late term abortion performed by De Crespigny that was the stimulus for Brumby's move to legalise abortion, when the doctor faced possible prosecution for aborting a baby at 32 weeks for suspected dwarfism. It turned out that "Perhaps the baby wasn't so small afterall!" Read more here.
  
 
Leslie Cannold again appears to have zero regard for the unborn who are the most affected by a woman's decision to abort. In an interview with Channel 7 regarding the 600% increase in late term abortions at the Royal Women's Hospital (since the abortion law reform), Leslie Cannold only expressed concern about the lack of service delivery, and appeared to not blink an eye at the tragedy of so many babies being aborted so late.  View here.
 
This footage also clearly shows that this legislation only serves men who support abortion and who might seek to coerce women to abort. It fails men who wish to embrace fatherhood. To hear the stories of men who are still dealing with the loss of their children through abortion,  some 20 - 30 years later is nothing short of heart wrenching. Jack, a 60 year old man described the feeling of sitting down with his three adult sons, "knowing one of my kids is missing". Or Mark, whose girlfriend had an abortion without him even knowing - he is still recovering from the pain some 30 years later.
This legislation promotes inequality, endorsing that men only have a say in the death but not the life of their children. This abortion legislation endorses coercion from men and potentially even sexual predators of teenage girls (there is no requirement to report sexual abuse, no requirment to screen for coercion and no requirment for parental consent).  The inequality of this legislation in regard to men is outrageous.
 
Quite a few of those interviewed, including Jo Wainer - who received an Australia Day Award for her establishment of abortion clinics in Victoria (under the guise of advancing women's rights), have been/ are well paid for their involvement in the abortion industry. 
 
This footage by abortion "experts" and "pro choice" politicians is a useful tool for pro life advocates to demonstrate that this legislation is based on principles of inequality and discrimination, on misinformation and unfounded rhetoric (from many who profit from the abortion industry).
The Coalition Government of Victoria must right this wrong...because it is so very wrong that this legislation was ever passed.
 
 Related Footage - 'A Story About Life' featuring Peter Kavanagh and Melissa Ohden.
 

What NSW leaders say about abortion legislation

Life Network Australia - Wednesday, February 16, 2011

In the lead up to the NSW election, Leesha McKenny (SMH, Feb. 16, 2011 ) has reported that 'Leaders reject abortion change' - the title of her article.

According to the SMH, Premier Kristina Keneally has told a forum of Christian leaders at Parliament House, that her government "will not pursue decriminalising abortion in NSW".  

MS Keneally was also asked about whether NSW might adopt legislation similar to that in South Australia, which keeps more detailed records of abortion data and statistics. She revealed that NSW collects some data but that it is not made public and that she "had concerns about privacy issues, about how the data is collected and how it is interpreted". Ms Keneally did not dismiss that similar measures might be considered in NSW in the future and said that "as a nation we need better information to inform this debate".

The article described the response of the Opposition Leader, Barry O'Farrell who also stated that "his party similarly had no plans to seek the decriminalisation of abortion" and that "Any abortion vote in Parliament would be a conscience vote for members of his party".

This comment by Mr. O'Farrell is of little comfort to pro life advocates who witnessed the change of legislation in Victoria which now allows (legal) abortion up until birth! This extreme Victorian legislation was passed by a conscience vote, with the rejection of sixty amendments that were designed to add at least some protection for babies and women.

David Hutt from the Australian Christian Lobby told The SMH that "The invitation only event was an opportunity for the leaders to make their case to the Christian community on various issues before the state election on March 26." 

Christian leaders "from a cross-section of denominations"  were represented at the forum in Sydney.

Inquiry into baby deaths rejected by Victoria

Life Network Australia - Thursday, July 29, 2010

After a debate described by observers as "vicious" and "brutal" the Victorian Legislative Council last night rejected a motion to have the deaths of babies who are born alive following abortions investigated by a committee of the Parliament.  The motion was lost twenty-seven votes to nine votes, after ALP MP's were instructed to vote against it.  The motion was moved by Peter Kavanagh of the DLP.

"My motion was simply a call to investigate the deaths of babies.  The fact that these babies have been born alive after 'failed' abortions seems to mean that abortion staff think that those babies do not have a right to live.  Even after they have been born alive.  Last night's vote suggests
that unfortunately this is also the attitude of a majority of Victoria's politicians" Mr Kavanagh said.

"Brian Tee and Gayle Tierney for the ALP together with Colleen Hartland for the Greens launched a coordinated personal attack on me. All of them asserted facts which were contradicted by the very documents to which they referred. They did not even read the motion they were arguing against!" Mr Kavanagh said.

"I was told by several distressed ALP MP's that they had to vote against my motion.  They said that the ALP decided to vote against the proposed investigation because it did not want anything at all that even hinted at abortion to be mentioned at the time of the election" Mr Kavanagh said.

On 20 May 2010 the Herald Sun reported on the recently released 2007 annual report of the Consultative Council on Obstetric and Paediatric Mortality and Morbidity which showed that 54 out of 181 late term foetuses who were aborted for “abnormalities” (at around 26 to 28 weeks) survived late term abortions but all of them in the period studied died “post-natally”.

He further noted that babies born after 26 to 28 weeks of gestation have a very high chance of survival if given even minimal care, and that the death of every one of these babies in the period studied therefore suggests that they were neglected to death, if not deliberately killed.

Recent media reports suggest that the number of late-term abortions in Victoria have sky-rocketed since abortion was decriminalised in the State.

Is abortion legal?

Life Network Australia - Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Abortion is effectively available on demand in every State up to 20 weeks gestation, later in the ACT and Victoria.

In New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, the Northern Territory and Tasmania, it is a criminal offence to unlawfully supply or administer with the intent to procure a miscarriage. 

In NSW and Queensland, the definition of an unlawful abortion is determined by case law, based largely on the 1969 Menhennitt Ruling in the Victorian Supreme Court. This ruling held that an abortion will be lawful if necessary because there is the risk of serious danger to the life or physical or mental health of the pregnant woman from continuing the pregnancy, not ‘merely the normal dangers of pregnancy and childbirth’. Modern interpretations of this ruling include any kind of mental stress from continuing the pregnancy to be ‘serious danger’.

The South Australian, Western Australian, Northern Territory and Tasmanian legislation sets out provisions for a lawful or ‘legally justified’ abortion. These provisions provide limitations on the gestational age at which the abortion is lawful, and the nature of the necessary danger to the mother.

Abortion has been decriminalised in both the ACT and Victoria. The Victorian legislation allows for abortion on demand up until 24 weeks. It also provides for abortion until full term where two doctors testify that the abortion is appropriate, having regard for the woman’s current and future physical, psychological and social circumstances.

For more information: http://www.saltshakers.org.au/issues/abortion/124-the-law-in-australia 

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