Current:Home > ScamsPoland has a strict abortion law — and many abortions. Lawmakers are now tackling the legislation -Edge Finance Strategies
Poland has a strict abortion law — and many abortions. Lawmakers are now tackling the legislation
Charles Langston View
Date:2025-04-10 19:25:40
WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Poland’s parliament held a long-awaited debate Thursday on liberalizing the country’s strict abortion law. The traditionally Catholic nation has one of the most restrictive laws in Europe, but many women terminate pregnancies at home with pills mailed from abroad.
Lawmakers in the lower house of parliament considered four proposals and will vote Friday on whether to send them for further work.
Abortion is regulated by a 1993 law that was heavily influenced by the Catholic church, and was further restricted following a 2020 constitutional court ruling preventing abortion in case of fetal abnormalities.
“The abortion ban does not work,” left-wing lawmaker Katarzyna Ueberhan said during the debate. “One in three women in Poland has had an abortion. One in three. I am one of them, and I think I am not alone here today.”
Prime Minister Donald Tusk, who came to power in December after eight years of rule by a conservative party that restricted abortion rights, wants to legalize abortion until the 12th week of pregnancy. But his three-party governing coalition is torn on the issue, and conservatives in his alliance had pushed to keep the issue off the agenda until last weekend’s local elections were over.
Surveys show public support for a more liberal law, but those fighting for a total ban are also mobilized.
A conservative lawmaker, Dariusz Matecki, played the sound of a child’s heartbeat through a microphone at one point in the debate and held a poster showing a fetus and the words “10th week after conception.”
Władysław Kurowski with the main conservative opposition party, Law and Justice, argued that lawmakers should instead deal with the country’s falling birth rate, and said “we must resolutely oppose this crime against the Polish people.”
Meanwhile, an anti-abortion group held a demonstration outside showing graphic images.
“Even if these criminal and murderous laws are pushed through, the voice of the pro-life community will still rise very strongly and defend the unborn,” said Marcin Perlowski, one of the campaigners.
Crucially, conservative politicians hold key political positions with the power to block change.
One is President Andrzej Duda, who holds veto power over legislation and who last month vetoed a law that would have allowed over-the-counter access to the morning-after pill for girls and women ages 15 and above.
The other is the parliament speaker, Szymon Hołownia, who had once considered becoming a Dominican friar. Abortion rights advocates accuse him of violating the will of voters by keeping the issue off the agenda for months.
“He is a Christian fundamentalist abusing his power as the speaker of parliament,” said Marta Lempart, head of the Women’s Strike, a group that organized mass protests in recent years while the previous right-wing government pushed to restrict abortion rights.
Under the current law, doctors in Poland can only provide abortions if a woman’s health or life is at risk or if the pregnancy results from a crime. However, doctors often will not perform abortions even when they are permissible under the law, citing their conscience.
There have been cases in recent years of women with troubled pregnancies who died after doctors prioritized keeping the fetuses alive.
Women with pregnancies resulting from rape have the right to an abortion if they report the crime to the prosecutor’s office. But in practice, no woman has done so for the past 10 years due to the double stigma of acknowledging the rape publicly and seeking an abortion, said Natalia Broniarczyk, an activist with Abortion Dream Team, one of several groups that helps Polish women obtain abortion pills from abroad or travel abroad for the procedure.
“There is no trust in the official system,” she said.
Broniarczyk estimated that about 120,000 abortions occur per year among women in Poland — some 50,000 provided by her group alone.
Another Polish activist who helps provide abortions is activist Kinga Jelińska with the group Women Help Women. She runs a helpline from the Netherlands and sends pills to Poland.
Jelińska, in parliament Thursday, said the network of groups helping women have abortions at home are the only ones in Poland who follow World Health Organization guidelines on abortion care, which stress the use of pills as the safest abortion method.
“It’s not the state, it’s not the doctors, but feminists like myself and my colleagues ... that do the most abortions in this country,” she said, holding up a packet of pills.
Under the law, it’s not a crime for women to end their pregnancies, but assisting a woman in terminating her pregnancy is a crime punishable by three years in prison.
A bill proposed by the left would decriminalize such assistance. Two other bills, one drafted by the left and the other by Tusk’s Civic Coalition, propose legalizing abortion up to the 12th week of pregnancy.
A fourth bill, introduced by the parliament speaker’s conservative political grouping, the Third Way, would return Poland to the pre-2020 situation, meaning women could once again terminate pregnancies on the basis of fetal defects but most restrictions on abortions would remain.
veryGood! (154)
Related
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Taylor Swift bill is signed into Minnesota law, boosting protections for online ticket buyers
- Did Miss USA Noelia Voigt's resignation statement contain a hidden message?
- New Mexico high court upholds man’s 3 murder convictions in 2018 shooting deaths near Dixon
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- House Republicans will turn to K-12 schools in latest antisemitism probe
- Kirk Herbstreit, Chris Fowler ready to 'blow people's minds' with EA Sports College Football 25
- Connecticut House passes plan to spend remaining COVID funds, forgoing changes to state budget
- Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
- Colorado supermarket shooter was sane at the time of the attack, state experts say
Ranking
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Colorado supermarket shooter was sane at the time of the attack, state experts say
- Activist says US congressman knocked cellphone from her hand as she asked about Israel-Hamas war
- The TWR Supercat V-12 is the coolest Jaguar XJS you (probably) forgot about
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- 'Baby Reindeer' shines light on complicated aspects of sexual abuse
- Horoscopes Today, May 7, 2024
- Beyoncé's name to be added to French encyclopedic dictionary
Recommendation
Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
Yes, Zendaya looked stunning. But Met Gala was a tone-deaf charade of excess and hypocrisy.
High school students, frustrated by lack of climate education, press for change
Social Security benefits could be cut in 2035, one year later than previously forecast
Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
Future of MLB’s Tampa Bay Rays to come into focus with key meetings on $1.3B stadium project
Olympic flame arrives in Marseille, France, 79 days before the Paris 2024 Games
Keep Up With Kendall Jenner's 2 Jaw-Dropping Met Gala After-Party Looks