Irish woman’s death after abortion leads to manslaughter trial, but where’s the media?
Savita Halappanavar's death in October 2012 made Ireland’s strict abortion law an international scandal. But where's the outrage over Britain's lax abortion law? |
By Steve
Weatherbe
Why is one Indo-Irish woman’s
death during childbirth far, far more newsworthy than another’s death from
abortion? Apparently, because it makes a better stick to beat at Ireland’s
strict abortion laws.
The death of Savita
Halappanavar in October 2012, in a Galway hospital during a difficult
pregnancy, made Ireland’s strict abortion law an international scandal.
The death of Irish resident Aisha
Chithira that same year from complications of an English abortion has led to a
manslaughter trial in July for a Marie Stopes clinician and two nurses. But no
infamy, no calls for reform of Britain’s porous Abortion Act and no headlines
in Indian news media.
“Three years after Aisha
Chithira’s death we are only now finding out her name,” said Paul Tully of the
Society for the Protection of Unborn Children. “She died invisibly and the
medical staff alleged to be responsible are being tried invisibly. But her
death should prompt a review of how British abortion law is being used and
abused.”
Tully remembers well how the news
media and abortion lobby groups turned the death of Savita Halappanavar into an
attack on Ireland’s ban on all abortions. Her death led to The Protection of
Life During Pregnancy Act, which came controversially into force in 2014, and
allows abortion to save the mother’s life.
“Ireland’s abortion law was not in
fact responsible for Savita Halappanavar’s death,” he told LifeSiteNews.
“Britain’s abortion laws were responsible for Aisha Chithira’s.” But three
years ago, he recalls, “I had Indian reporters calling me, Indian feminists
screaming at me over Skype.”
Nobody in India seems upset over
Chithira’s death. Halapnavar’s father-in-law threatened to sue the Irish
hospital but Cithira’s has not. No stories on her appear in the Indian Times.
Chithera got her abortion at the
Marie Stopes abortion facility in Ealing, a suburb of London, in January 2013,
and was quickly discharged to a taxi driver who took her to a friend in Slough,
southeast of the capital. She began bleeding in the vehicle, which rerouted to
the Wexham Hospital, but was dead on arrival.
That is virtually all that is
known about the incident, in harsh contrast to that of Halappanavar’s death,
where even confidential discussions between medical staff at Galway’s
University Hospital came to light (especially the midwife’s explanation
for why she couldn’t get the desired abortion—“This is a Catholic country.”)
Chithira, 32, was 20 weeks
pregnant, her husband told the Irish Times. She had a difficult pregnancy with
her first child and the couple had belatedly decided her second would be too
painful to carry to term. According to him, she had died of heart failure due
to blood loss.
Going on trial in July for
negligent manslaughter and failing to take reasonable care are Dr. Adedayo
Adedeji, and nurses Gemma Pullen and Margaret Miller.
They are all charged with
manslaughter by gross negligence, and a health and safety offence of failing to
take reasonable care.
Tully told LifeSiteNews that the
National Health Service promotes abortion access heavily, but it does not
enforce the 1967 Abortion Act in either its own hospitals or the commercial
abortion clinics.
“The (so-called) law says abortions should
only be done when two doctors certify that the woman’s mental or physical
health would be risked more by giving birth than by having an abortion,” said
Tully. But he said it was a common practice for the second doctor, often
at the clinic, to come to that opinion without looking at the woman.
Complications that could have been foreseen are therefore missed.
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