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Spain: Socialist Party capitulates to right wing anti-abortionists
By Paul Stuart
5 January 2008
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At a December 28 press conference, Prime Minister Jose Luis
Rodriguez Zapatero finally ruled out including in the Socialist
Workers Party of Spain (PSOE) manifesto for next Marchs
general election the decriminalisation and extension of abortion
rights beyond the 1985 criteria established after the fall of
General Francisco Francos dictatorship.
During December Zapatero had urged a period of reflection,
which it was anticipated would lead to some form of extension
of abortion rights. Instead, Zapatero caved in to a campaign by
the Vatican and anti-abortionist groups.
He argued that his initial proposal was misunderstood, saying,
There are no plans to modify the law in this area.
Abortion, a basic democratic right for women, is under sustained
attack by Catholic and right-wing groups. Workers at private clinics
face violent attacks by anti-abortionist groups, who model their
campaigns on their American counterparts.
The 1985 criteria were themselves a compromise by the then
PSOE government of Felipe Gonzalez with political representatives
of the former Franco dictatorship. The law only allows abortion
in three highly specific instances.
* When the woman has been raped and has reported it to the
police then an abortion is allowed during the first 12 weeks of
the pregnancy.
* If serious physical abnormalities have been detected in the
fetus up to 22 weeks.
* If the pregnant woman faces serious risks to her health or
negative psychological problems. In such circumstances there is
no time restriction.
Abortion is not allowed on request. The law categorically rules
out abortion on the grounds of economic hardship.
An array of Catholic groups from the Vatican to the E-Christians,
HazteOir.org, Institute for Family Policy and Foundation Vida,
are demanding that the total ban imposed by Franco is restored.
Zapateros announcement came after the Popular Party and
the PSOE joined forces in parliament to crush a motion (by 277
votes to 21) moved by followers of the United Left (IU), controlled
by the Stalinist Communist Party, to broaden access to abortion
and for the procedure to be provided by the public health service
instead of expensive private clinics. A PSOE spokesperson declared
they agreed with the spirit of the motion, but preferred a
calm change based on consensus and dialogue, adding, We
just dont think that this is the right time or manner of
dealing with such a serious issue.
When the PSOE was elected in March 2004, it had promised to
remove many of the restrictions on abortion. The latest policy
change by the PSOE was precipitated by a series of police raids
on abortion clinics in Barcelona, sparked by information passed
on to police by anti-abortion groups. The raids resulted on November
26 in a judge ordering the closure of four abortion centres operated
by Dr. Carlos Morin. The clinics under investigationGinemedex,
Barnamedic, EMECE and TCBadvertised throughout Europe.
According to one report, the initial complaint was filed by
E-Christians in Barcelona who in turn based their material on
a Danish documentary investigation that secretly filmed a pregnant
journalist who asked if, being 30 weeks pregnant, one of the clinics
doctors would carry out an abortion on her.
The police raids were followed by an immediate escalation in
the public campaign of anti-abortion groups and the right-wing
press. HazteOir.org organized a demonstration outside the Ministry
of Health in Madrid demanding more police raids and investigations
into abortion establishments and, once demonstrated how they do
not follow the law on abortion, that they be closed.
Lurid headlines appeared in the pressabortion mills,
death factories and even accusations that parts of
the fetus ending up in certain productsnone of which have
been substantiated. The ABC newspaper (a supporter of Francos
fascist dictatorship) described what the police had found
as a set of horrors more usually associated with Nazi extermination
camps. The operation, it said, has uncovered an entire
homicide industry that should shame any developed society.
Another right-wing newspaper, La Razon, boasted that
the actions of Catholic anti-abortion groups had resulted
in bringing abortion back to the forefront. La Razon
also mentioned the Institute for Family Policy, another
Christian-based platform that has redoubled its efforts in favor
of life since the court order to close the four abortion centres
in Barcelona. Its president, Eduardo Hertfelder, sent a letter
Monday to the Minister of Health demanding immediate publication
of the data on deaths by abortion in 2006.
Bishops had encouraged these organizations by publishing a
denunciation of abortion earlier in the year. This was followed
by a mass rally called by the Bishops Episcopal Conference in
defense of the traditional family on December 31 in Madrid. Fifty
bishops, cardinals and religious leaders participated. Buses came
from all over Spain and Portugal. Tens of thousands cheered as
Pope Benedict appeared on huge screens via a live satellite link
to praise the demonstration.
Speakers denounced the PSOE governments social policies,
presenting themselves as the victim of materialist forces.
According to one report on 2 January in El Pais, the
archbishop of Madrid, Cardinal Antonio María Rouco Varela,
argued that the governments policies related to the family
are a step back for human rights. Whoever harms
the family as an institution, even if they do so unconsciously,
makes national and international peace more fragile, Rouco
Varela declared.
Kiko Arguello, a senior figure in the Neo-cathecumenal Waya
global evangelical movementsaid to the crowds, These
atheistic, irreligious governments want to make us believe that
our life has no meaning and that isnt true.
This is the latest Vatican-sponsored political rally against
the policies pursued by the PSOE government and comes just two
months before the general elections. Minister of Justice Mariano
Fernández Bermejo said of the rally that national-Catholicism
has now begun to campaign in support of the Popular Party
from the hand of the church hierarchy, and the most reactionary
Right. He condemned the use of a liturgy in favor of messages
that coincide with the well-known proposals defended by the Popular
Party.
It is in full knowledge of the nature and political intent
of the anti-abortion campaign that the PSOE has beat its latest
retreat.
Popular sentiment is opposed to the political intervention
of the Church, which has witnessed a virtual collapse in its influence
amongst the youth. Maria, speaking in El Pais, summed up
popular hostility to the church on this question, declaring, Thats
enough, we look like the US and its antiabortionist groups, those
who dont want to abort dont have to. Dont try
to manipulate the rest of the people, continue going to church
or wherever you like but stop trying to impose your criteria.
At this pace the next thing will be the defense of creationism
in schools. And all this three months before the elections. It
stinks.
Another reader added, It is still incredible that after
more than thirty years of democracy, we still have to put up with
part of the repressive and ideological blot that the church carries
on.
Zapateros decision to hold back from extending abortion
rights from his partys manifesto is only his governments
latest attempt to appease the far-right. In the same spirit, José
Bono Martínez, who quit as Minister of Defence in April
last year, has been brought out of retirement to lead the PSOEs
election campaign. He is a self-proclaimed devout Catholic, and
has urged an embrace of nationalist Catholic traditions.
See Also:
Spain: 16-year-old
murdered by fascist
[8 December 2007]
New law condemning
Francos crimes further polarises Spain
[21 November 2007]
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