The Iona Institute has been invited to make a presentation to the
Citizens’ Assembly on abortion at the weekend of its penultimate
sitting, on Sunday 5th. March.
David Quinn, Director of the Iona Institute, told CatholicIreland
that he received the invitation on Monday of this week.
The Iona
presentation, which will be made by Maria Steen, is to last ten minutes
with time for questions and answers at the end.
The think-tank for religion and society has already made a written
submission to the Assembly which concentrated on the reasons why Ireland
should not hold a referendum on this matter.
Iona’s oral submission will be based around its written submission,
which asks questions such as: “Do we have a right to take the life of
other human beings? Would we even consider holding a referendum to
remove the right to life of any other category of human being? If we
tried, we might first strive to convince ourselves that they are not
human or that it is a matter of opinion whether they are human.“
Other groups representing both sides on the abortion issue have been
invited to address the Assembly on 5 March, but a spokesperson for the
Citizen’s Assembly told CatholicIreland they were not releasing the
names of the groups they have approached as they are still waiting for
responses to some of the invitations.
The
Citizens’ Assembly invited the general public to submit written
opinions and contribute to the discussion on the Eighth Amendment in
October 2016. Thirteen thousand submissions were received. According to
the PLC, a majority expressing support for the retention of the Eighth
Amendment.
Of the 13,000 submissions, over 10,000 are already available online. A
Citizen’s Assembly spokesperson said that putting the submissions
online was a slow process, as each submission had to be checked three
times and some were redacted on request.
Because of the huge volume of submissions, the Assembly organisers
have decided to focus the attention of Assembly members on a random
sample of 300 submissions. However, there is nothing to stop a member,
like other members of the public, from viewing the written submissions
which are online at www.citizensassembly.ie.
At its last deliberation, the Assembly considered submissions from
118 advocacy groups, interest groups and political parties. A majority
of these favour running a referendum on the Eighth Amendment.
Meanwhile the Pro Life Campaign (PLC), which has been monitoring the
working of the Assembly, has accused it of failing in its remit of
presenting an “impartial review of the Eighth Amendment”, instead
presenting “an almost completely one-sided and biased view of this
life-saving provision.”
In its Vital Signs newsletter it says that “Disgracefully, it [the
Assembly] has heard presentations from groups such as the British
Pregnancy Advisory Service (BPAS), Britain’s largest abortion provider
who opposed any restrictions on abortion in England, including even a
ban on sex selection abortions which specifically target baby girls.”
It says that “The case for keeping the Amendment and the stories of
the lives saved by it have been largely ignored.”
The PLC is appealing
to the public to contact their TDs to raise concerns over the Citizens’
Assembly’s “flawed process”.
Members of the public can make representations at: http://prolifecampaign.ie/main/citizensassembly/.