Polish court rules against abortion due to fetal defects

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POZNAN, POLAND - MARCH 23: People protesting against a new government measure to further restrict abortions in Poland gather as part of "Black Friday" demonstrations nationwide on March 23, 2018 in Poznan, Poland. The governing PiS party is seeking to enact a law called "Halt Abortion" that would make abortions based on congenital defects of the fetus illegal. Opponents, among them the women's rights group Dziewuchy Dziewuchom (Girls to Girls), called on women across Poland to go on strike today and gather for protests in cities nationwide. The conservative PiS party is pushing hard on policies based on a strongly Catholic-oriented political orientation and sought to make abortion completley illegal in 2016, though the attempt failed following large-scale protests. Poland currently allows abortion solely in cases of rape and irreparable damage to the fetus. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

Poland’s highest court has ruled that abortions due to fetal defects are unconstitutional, moving the country towards a near-total ban on terminations.

The nation, which already had some of the strictest abortion laws in Europe, will now only allow the procedure in cases of rape, incest or when the mother’s life in danger.

The move to further restrict abortion had been pursued by Poland’s populist government for months, and has raised alarm among women’s rights campaigners and human rights watchdogs.

Around 98% of abortions in Poland had been conducted as a result of fetal defects, meaning the ruling bans virtually all termination procedures taking place in the country. It could force women to carry a child even if they know the baby will not survive childbirth, campaigners said on Thursday.

The Constitutional Court’s Thursday ruling marked the first change to Polish abortion law since 1993, but comes after a years-long effort from the government to curtail access to terminations.

It was condemned by the Council of Europe’s Commissioner for Human Rights, Dunja Mijatovic, who called Thursday a “sad day for women’s rights.”

“Removing the basis for almost all legal abortions in Poland amounts to a ban and violates Human Rights,” Mijatovic tweeted. “Today’s ruling of the Constitutional Court means underground/abroad abortions for those who can afford and even greater ordeal for all others.”

Poland’s governing party Law and Justice has placed anti-abortion rhetoric at the heart of their socially conservative agenda, and attempted to pass a bill banning abortions due to fetal defects in the early weeks of the coronavirus pandemic.

The plan was ultimately scrapped in Poland’s parliament, but has since been taken on by the nation’s highest court. Law and Justice has spent much of its time in office tightening its grip on the courts, removing judges it finds to be politically objectionable, replacing them with what critics claim are political appointments, and creating disciplinary measures for justices who make rulings ministers don’t agree with.

“There is an effective ban on abortion in Poland now,” Agnieszka Kubal, a sociology and human rights scholar at University College London, told CNN. “This has to be read in the context of the wider right-wing discourse on abortion in Poland, that women cannot be trusted with the right to choose.”

Early attempts to restrict abortions legislatively drew women’s rights protesters to the streets, with massive demonstrations taking place in 2016 and in subsequent years. In April this year, many activists used their cars to demonstrate without violating Covid-19 restrictions.