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sábado, 23 de febrero de 2013

UK - The current law permits an abortion to take place up to birth (40 weeks) if tests for disability indicate that the child may be disabled when born




The UK parliament has begun a controversial new inquiry into abortion on the grounds of disability. The inquiry aims to discover the impact of abortion on the disabled and whether this constitutes discrimination. The enquiry will run until the end of next month and is being co-ordinated by a 12-member bipartisan committee chaired by Fiona Bruce MP

Under British law, an abortion can take place up to birth (40 weeks) if tests indicate that a child may be “severely disabled” when born. The term “severely disabled” has been liberally interpreted by many doctors, to the extent that minor defects such as a cleft palate or club foot have become sufficient grounds for an abortion.

But the spark for the inquiry was reports of sex-selective abortion in Britain. Ms Bruce’s early-day motion says that MPs should be “appalled that there now appears to be evidence of significant numbers of baby girls being aborted illegally in the UK simply because of their gender” and calls for “immediate and effective enforcement of the law in this area”

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Read more: www.bioedge.org

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