Women’s Right: France Makes Abortion Constitutional Right, UK Rise in Abortion Prosecutions

France has made abortion a constitutional right for women, becoming the first country in the world to do so. On the other hand, the UK is arresting a record number of women for abortion-related crimes.

France’s Groundbreaking Constitutional Move

Image Credit: Shutterstock / HJBC

France has made history by becoming the first country in the world to make abortion a constitutional right just weeks after it was revealed that more women are facing criminal charges in the UK for abortions.

The New Constitutional Right

Featured Image Credit: Shutterstock / Obatala-photography

Prime Minister of France, Gabriel Attal, praised the change in his speech about the new constitutional right, “It takes one generation, one year, one week for things to change drastically,” he said.

The Struggle With Freedom

Image Credit: Shutterstock / Heidi Besen

Prime Minister Attal acknowledged the struggle of “American women who must fight for abortion rights” along with those in Europe, such as “Hungarians and Poles for whom abortion is no longer an enshrined freedom.”

Rise In UK Abortion Prosecutions

Image Credit: Shutterstock / Sandor Szmutko

In the UK, abortion has been a legal right since 1967, with a time-limit clause added in 1990 so long as it takes place within the first 24 weeks of pregnancy, but in the last year there has been a concerning rise in abortion-related prosecutions.

Prosecuted For Having An Abortion

Shutterstock/ Sterling Images

Cases of women in the UK being prosecuted for having an abortion after the legal 24 weeks are at the highest they’ve been since before the 1960s, a huge contrast to what’s going on across the Channel.

Facing Criminal Charges

Image Credit: Shutterstock / Proxima Studio

In a study conducted by the British Pregnancy Advisory Service, the UK has seen a huge shift in the number of women facing criminal charges for abortions, some of whom even faced prison time.

Alarming Increase in UK Abortion Convictions

Image Credit: Shutterstock / Loredana Sangiuliano

The UK has seen a significant surge in abortion convictions, with six women prosecuted in the last 18 months, double the number that has been convicted from 1967-2022.

Penalties For Having An Abortion

Image Credit: Shutterstock / Gorodenkoff

In 1861, The Offences Against the Persons Act made abortion a criminal offence in England and Wales, exposing women to severe penalties including life imprisonment before it all changed in 1967.

A Legal Contradiction

Image Credit: Shutterstock / William Potter

While the Abortion Act of 1967 permits abortion under specific conditions, the underlying 1861 legislation continues to criminalize abortion, creating a legal contradiction.

Strict Rules for Abortion in UK

Image Credit: Shutterstock / winnond

Under the Abortion Act in the UK, two medical practitioners must confirm that the pregnancy has not exceeded 24 weeks for an abortion to be legal.

Permitted Exemptions

Image Credit: Shutterstock / Jirapong Manustrong

Certain exemptions are permitted, for example, if the mother’s health is at risk or if the fetus carries any abnormalities that could lead it to live a life in suffering.

Overwhelming Parliamentary Support

Image Credit: Shutterstock / Heidi Besen

Of the 902 French parliamentarians, an overwhelming majority of 780 voted in favor of the constitutional amendment, demonstrating broad consensus, with the public widely supporting the idea.

Calling For A Change

Image Credit: Shutterstock / Monkey Business Images

Doctors in the UK have called for a change in the so-called “outdated” law, including Dr Ranee Thakar, president of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists’, who is concerned by the “small but increasing number of women are being prosecuted.”

Health Professionals Under Fire

Image Credit: Shutterstock / fizkes

Dr Thakar revealed that it’s not just the woman who can be punished for abortions carried out after 24 weeks, arguing, “health professionals are placed under unacceptable and unwarranted scrutiny.”

Denied To A Safe Abortion By Professionals

Image Credit: Shutterstock / LightField Studios

Recently, a woman was prosecuted for performing an abortion despite being told she could not have a safe one by medical professionals, forcing her to carry it out herself as the police found a fetus in the woods.

Police Use Controversial Method to Find Culprit

Image Credit: Shutterstock / Ground Picture

To find the culprit, the police asked for classified information on every woman who had been refused an abortion in the clinic, although that was met with scrutiny by the British Pregnancy Advisory Service.

A Duty Of Confidentiality

Image Credit: Shutterstock / wellphoto

“We owe our clients a duty of confidentiality. If this is information you want, you’ll have to get a court order,” argued the CEO of the British Pregnancy Advisory Service, Claire Murphy.

Will It Change?

Image Credit: Shutterstock / GagliardiPhotography

MPs are soon to vote to pass an amendment that would fully decriminalize abortion in England and Wales, as opposed to the partial decriminalization that we’ve seen in the last 50 years.

Global Abortion Progression

Image Credit: Shutterstock / ASDF_MEDIA

As France leads the way in global abortion progression, the UK, despite being just 20 miles apart, seems much further away in the current abortion debate.

More Articles Like This…

Broken Britain: 12 Reasons Behind the UK’s Decline

Say the Unsayable: 10 Occasions When Farage Spoke His Mind About Britain

The post France Makes Abortion a Constitutional Right, While UK Sees Rise in Abortion Prosecutions first appeared on Edge Media.

Featured Image Credit: Shutterstock / Frederic Legrand – COMEO.

Oscar Davies, an expert in US and UK politics and sports, is renowned for his sharp and engaging writing style, appealing to a broad spectrum of readers.

Leave a Comment