In reaction to a recently aired documentary, in which a 8-month pregnant journalist was offered an abortion on her healthy fetus by an abortionist in Spain, Danish legislators are calling on the EU to have continent-wide laws on abortion to prevent child murder.
I understand what the Danish are trying to do, but I think from a pro-life strategy, it's horrible. This might mean a ban on late-term abortions, but more access to abortion in countries like Germany and France, whose laws are comparatively restrictive.
Still not convinced abortion is a shady business?
Saroj Adlakha, 59, was accused of arranging the abortion for Shilpa Abrol, who was 31 weeks pregnant at the time. Abrol, now 20, and Adlakha, were charged with conspiracy to commit an offense against a person outside the United Kingdom.
Adlakha admitted she coordinated an abortion for the woman on the advise of British Pregnancy Advisory Service officials.
She told undercover journalists for the London Telegraph newspaper that she would help arrange a similar abortion for a woman who is 29 weeks pregnant with a healthy baby. Adlakha also said she would provide a pre-abortion exam and provide followup care after the abortion.
In secretly taped video footage recorded by the London newspaper, Adlakha is shown lying to a hospital over the telephone, claiming to have a patient "in severe pain" in order to obtain information needed from the British government to send the woman to Spain.
Approximately eighty percent of the abortions done at the Spanish abortion business are performed on British women, the British press reported.
Another late-term abortion facility in Valencia, Spain has also come under fire for offering financial incentives to British women and health clinics to come to Spain for what would be illegal late-term abortions in England.
The Mediterr?nia Medica abortion facility offers British women discounts on the late-term abortions and offers to pay their travel expenses to fly there. The abortion center also offers financial kickbacks to British pregnancy advice hotlines to refer women there for abortions.
Leonardo Llorente, one of the abortion practitioners at the Spanish center told an undercover reporter for the London Telegraph that, despite Spanish law, the center would never refuse to perform a late-term abortion on a woman after 26 weeks of pregnancy since "probably all women wanting to get an abortion at this stage will be psychologically affected."
"Always it can be proved that the patient at this moment had serious mental problems even though later on the patients can be completely normal," he told the Telegraph, justifying the late-term abortions.
Asked whether this meant that the woman could be given an abortion "whatever the situation", he answered: "Definitely."
In Spain, abortions after 22 weeks of pregnancy can only be performed if the mother's physical or mental health is at risk.
Did you notice how aborting a 31-week-old fetus is considered committing an act against a PERSON?
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