*After years of campaigning, England and Wales have officially decriminalised abortion for women in a “landmark moment” as part of proposed changes to the Crime and Policing Bill.*
*The government has now formally done away with the ancient Offences Against the Person Act from 1861 and the Infant Life (Preservation) Act of 1929, both of which saw women and girls open to arrest, investigation or prosecution in relation to procuring an abortion for themselves. Recent years have seen a worrying increase in criminal cases, after minimal incidences for decades, as more anti-abortion groups receive funding in the UK.*
*Women and girls who have been previously convicted or jailed in relation to an abortion outside of the legal framework will receive a pardon (although this won’t happen immediately; the government will be required to enact this in future and it is expected to take place over the next year).*
*The change sees English and Welsh law more closely resemble legislation seen in Canada, Denmark, Sweden, France and New Zealand…*
InTheEndEntropyWins on
>Recent years have seen a worrying increase in criminal cases,
But weren’t they all kind of justified?
Like if someone aborts a healthy 8 month old baby for no medical reason, should we celebrate that’s no longer criminal?
[deleted] on
[deleted]
One_Complex6429 on
I’m glad about this.
I’m also still sad that 1 in 3 pregnancies in UK ends in a termination.
zephyroxyl on
Comments are, of course, already full of lies about how „abortion is now legal up to the point of birth“.
It is not. Medical professionals performing abortions outside the legally established time limit _are still liable for their actions_
The police are unable to investigate women who, for whatever reason, have a pregnancy terminate after that time limit.
This includes (and is designed for) protecting people who have _miscarried_ from harassment by the police during a very stressful and upsetting time in their life.
Give your heads a fucking wobble.
JB_UK on
My understanding is that this is fundamentally about access to abortion pills through the post. Prosecutions were extremely rare before Covid, when the system changed to allow women to self certify how far through pregnancy they are, and then there was a spike in prosecutions because people were taking the pills much later than was previously allowed. Rather than go back to the old system which required an in person visit, politicians have basically made it legal to take abortion pills at any point during pregnancy.
Edit: Just to say taking abortion pills in late term is a significant risk to the health of the mother as well, we shouldn’t normalise that.
DukePPUk on
To be absolutely clear, because that is a terrible headline, women *can* still be prosecuted for abortions.
But a woman cannot be prosecuted for *her own* abortion.
That is a fairly significant qualifier missing from the headline.
MD564 on
Great! My friend would’ve died recently if she didn’t get an abortion because her baby was dying in uteru.
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*After years of campaigning, England and Wales have officially decriminalised abortion for women in a “landmark moment” as part of proposed changes to the Crime and Policing Bill.*
*The government has now formally done away with the ancient Offences Against the Person Act from 1861 and the Infant Life (Preservation) Act of 1929, both of which saw women and girls open to arrest, investigation or prosecution in relation to procuring an abortion for themselves. Recent years have seen a worrying increase in criminal cases, after minimal incidences for decades, as more anti-abortion groups receive funding in the UK.*
*Women and girls who have been previously convicted or jailed in relation to an abortion outside of the legal framework will receive a pardon (although this won’t happen immediately; the government will be required to enact this in future and it is expected to take place over the next year).*
*The change sees English and Welsh law more closely resemble legislation seen in Canada, Denmark, Sweden, France and New Zealand…*
>Recent years have seen a worrying increase in criminal cases,
But weren’t they all kind of justified?
Like if someone aborts a healthy 8 month old baby for no medical reason, should we celebrate that’s no longer criminal?
[deleted]
I’m glad about this.
I’m also still sad that 1 in 3 pregnancies in UK ends in a termination.
Comments are, of course, already full of lies about how „abortion is now legal up to the point of birth“.
It is not. Medical professionals performing abortions outside the legally established time limit _are still liable for their actions_
The police are unable to investigate women who, for whatever reason, have a pregnancy terminate after that time limit.
This includes (and is designed for) protecting people who have _miscarried_ from harassment by the police during a very stressful and upsetting time in their life.
Give your heads a fucking wobble.
My understanding is that this is fundamentally about access to abortion pills through the post. Prosecutions were extremely rare before Covid, when the system changed to allow women to self certify how far through pregnancy they are, and then there was a spike in prosecutions because people were taking the pills much later than was previously allowed. Rather than go back to the old system which required an in person visit, politicians have basically made it legal to take abortion pills at any point during pregnancy.
Edit: Just to say taking abortion pills in late term is a significant risk to the health of the mother as well, we shouldn’t normalise that.
To be absolutely clear, because that is a terrible headline, women *can* still be prosecuted for abortions.
But a woman cannot be prosecuted for *her own* abortion.
That is a fairly significant qualifier missing from the headline.
Great! My friend would’ve died recently if she didn’t get an abortion because her baby was dying in uteru.