European Court Imposes Abortion on Catholic Ireland

December 17, 2010 at 12:30 am

Ireland may be regretting its slavish capitulation to all things European tonight after the European Court once again enthusiastically meddled matters that should only be decided by national parliaments:

Ireland’s constitutional ban on abortion violates pregnant women’s right to receive proper medical care in life-threatening cases, the European Court of Human Rights ruled Thursday, harshly criticizing Ireland’s long inaction on the issue.

The Strasbourg, France-based court ruled that a pregnant woman fighting cancer should have been allowed to get an abortion in Ireland in 2005 rather than being forced to go to England for the procedure. The judgment put Ireland under pressure to draft a law extending abortion rights to women whose pregnancies represent a potentially fatal threat to their own health.

Ireland has resisted doing that despite a 1992 judgment from the Irish Supreme Court that said Ireland should provide abortions in cases where a woman’s life is endangered — including, controversially, by her own threats to commit suicide.

Including suicide threats would make abortion effectively legal there, and that’s a long way from the position consistently adopted by the voters of Ireland since its creation. Rather like votes for prisoners, the ECHR is interfering in domestic matters never envisaged by its well-intentioned founders. It’s time to reassert national sovereignty on both sides of the Irish Sea and ignore these rulings until elected parliaments speak.