The first abortion clinic on the island of Ireland opened on Thursday
in downtown Belfast, and faced organized protests from both Catholic
and Protestant activists.
In addition, Catholic and Protestant
politicians were united in calls to investigate the new facility.
The
Marie Stopes Family Planning Center offers the abortion pill to women
less than nine weeks pregnant but only in exceptional circumstances.
Laws in Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland require that women
must be determined to be at risk of death or long-term health damage
from a pregnancy before they may be eligible for the abortion pill.
Marie Stopes International is a British charity that operates clinics in
more than 40 countries.
According to the Associated Press, “Abortion is one of few issues
that unites Northern Ireland, a predominantly Protestant corner of the
United Kingdom, and the mostly Catholic Republic of Ireland. Both
jurisdictions keep abortion outlawed except in cases where doctors deem
the woman’s life at risk from continued pregnancy.”
The AP also reports
that, inside the clinic on its opening day, doctors and counselors dealt
with several women in crisis pregnancies and reported being deluged
with calls from women, including Republic of Ireland residents, seeking
appointments.
Wary of abortion rights gaining a foothold in Northern
Ireland, protesters want the clinic shut down.
The Roman Catholic Church
has begun an initiative to pressure the Irish government to revisit and
bolster its abortion ban.
Most Irish women in need of abortion travel to Britain, where it has
been legal since 1967.
It’s estimated that 1,000 women from Northern
Ireland and 4,000 women from the Irish Republic travel to the U.K. each
year for abortions.
Officials from Marie Stopes International told the
AP that they expect to provide very few abortions in Northern Ireland
due to the heavy legal restrictions, but that Ireland needs a safe
place, free of any social stigma, where women can go in the midst of a
crisis pregnancy.
“Mostly what we’ll be doing is offering advice. Many
of the people we see we won’t be able to treat, because of the legal
framework,” according to Marie Stopes Vice President Tracey McNeill.
The organization’s press release
states that a wide range of sexual and reproductive services are also
available from the center, including short- and long-term contraceptive
options, emergency contraception, STD testing and treatment, and HIV
testing.
The release goes on to state that the organization is dedicated
to meeting the family planning and sexual health needs of the
community—while also working within the law of Northern Ireland.
It
sounds to us like those two objectives may be mutually exclusive in some
cases, though.