Current:Home > InvestPolish opponents of abortion march against recent steps to liberalize strict law -Prosper Capital Insights
Polish opponents of abortion march against recent steps to liberalize strict law
View
Date:2025-04-18 21:05:38
WARSAW, Poland (AP) —
Thousands of Polish opponents of abortion marched in Warsaw on Sunday to protest recent steps by the new government to liberalize the predominantly Catholic nation’s strict laws and allow termination of pregnancy until the 12th week.
Many participants in the downtown march were pushing prams with children, while others were carrying white-and-red national flags or posters representing a fetus in the womb.
Poland’s Catholic Church has called for Sunday to be a day of prayer “in defense of conceived life” and has supported the march, organized by an anti-abortion movement.
“In the face of promotion of abortion in recent months, the march will be a rare occasion to show our support for the protection of human life from conception to natural death,” a federation of anti-abortion movements said in a statement.
They were referring to an ongoing public debate surrounding the steps that the 4-month-old government of Prime Minster Donald Tusk is taking to relax the strict law brought in by its conservative predecessor.
Last week, Poland’s parliament, which is dominated by the liberal and pro-European Union ruling coalition, voted to approve further detailed work on four proposals to lift the near-ban on abortions.
The procedure, which could take weeks or even months, is expected to be eventually rejected by conservative President Andrzej Duda, whose term runs for another year. Last month Duda vetoed a draft law that would have made the morning-after pill available over the counter from the age of 15.
A nation of some 38 million, Poland is seeking ways to boost the birth rate, which is currently at some 1.2 per woman — among the lowest in the European Union. Poland’s society is aging and shrinking, facts that the previous right-wing government used among its arguments for toughening the abortion law.
Currently, abortions are only allowed in cases of rape or incest or if the woman’s life or health is at risk. According to the Health Ministry, 161 abortions were performed in Polish hospitals in 2022. However, abortion advocates estimate that some 120,000 women in Poland have abortions each year, mostly by secretly obtaining pills from abroad.
Women attempting to abort themselves are not penalized, but anyone assisting them can face up to three years in prison. Reproductive rights advocates say the result is that doctors turn women away even in permitted cases for fear of legal consequences for themselves.
One of the four proposals being processed in parliament would decriminalize assisting a woman to have an abortion. Another one, put forward by a party whose leaders are openly Catholic, would keep a ban in most cases but would allow abortions in cases of fetal defects — a right that was eliminated by a 2020 court ruling. The two others aim to permit abortion through the 12th week.
veryGood! (74)
Related
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- 5 killed when recreational vehicle blows tire, crashes head-on into tractor-trailer
- Newly-hired instructor crashes car into Colorado driving school; 1 person injured
- Artemis 2 astronauts on seeing their Orion moonship for the first time: It's getting very, very real
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- 'Shortcomings' is a comedy that lives in the discomfort
- Russia hits Ukraine with deadly hypersonic missile strike as Kyiv claims local women spying for Moscow
- Ex Try Guys Member Ned Fulmer Spotted at Taylor Swift Concert With Wife One Year After Cheating Scandal
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- Person shot and wounded by South Dakota trooper in Sturgis, authorities say
Ranking
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Which NFL playoff teams will return in 2023? Ranking all 14 from most to least likely
- A billion-dollar coastal project begins in Louisiana. Will it work as sea levels rise?
- 'Rapper's Delight': How hip-hop got its first record deal
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Paper exams, chatbot bans: Colleges seek to ‘ChatGPT-proof’ assignments
- Michael Lorenzen throws 14th no-hitter in Phillies history in 7-0 victory over Nationals
- Northwestern athletic director blasts football staffers for ‘tone deaf’ shirts supporting Fitzgerald
Recommendation
'Most Whopper
Teen Rapper Lil Tay Dead
When is the next Mega Millions drawing? Record-breaking jackpot resets to $20 million
Will AI deepen distrust in news? Gannett, other media organizations want more regulations.
Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
Six takeaways from Disney's quarterly earnings call
'Botched' doctor Terry Dubrow credits wife Heather, star of 'RHOC,' after health scare
A poet pieces together an uncertain past in 'Memoir of a Kidnapping'