The decision by Justice Edward Pepperall to send Dawn Foster to prison for 28
months for accessing abortion pills back in 2020 shows the perils that access toabortion still faces, with the application of an archaic law. Foster is a44-year-old mother of three, who did not want another child. ---- Foster willserve the prison sentence half in custody and half under license. Abortion becamelegal in 1967 under the Abortion Act but the 1861 (!) law that Pepperall usedagainst her was never abolished. Despite pleas to the judge from medical bodieslike the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists and the Royal Collegeof Midwives not to imprison Foster, Pepperall cruelly went ahead.The 1861 Offenses Against the Person Act actually carries a maximum sentence oflife imprisonment. Pepperall accepted that Foster was in a vulnerable conditionwith her experiences but nevertheless sent her down. This is not an isolatedincident as the imprisonment of vulnerable women is common in the UK. Most womenin prison are there for non-violent offences. According to the Prison ReformTrust, they have often experienced domestic violence in the family as a child orin a relationship as an adult.Abortion in the UK is seen not as part of healthcare but as defined bycriminality. This sentence highlights the misogyny of the British legal system.At a time when the Roe versus Wade decision was overturned by the Supreme Courtin the USA, seriously endangering abortion rights there, and where it is outlawedin several states, even in instances of rape and incest, and where a woman inPoland died because doctors refused her an abortion, this sentencing reminds usthat abortion rights in this country too are still under threat. Pills throughthe post reduced waiting times and were seen by patients in a welcome light. AsKerry Abel of Abortion Rights noted "Pills by post was a significant measure thatreduced countless socio-economic barriers to abortion care during the pandemic."The Foster case is not the only example of legal threats to abortion. One womanserved two years in prison after inducing a miscarriage in 2019 under pressurefrom an abusive partner who stopped her from seeing a doctor. Another case wasthat of a 15-year-old who was investigated for a year over an early stillbirth.Reproductive rights must be defended and abortion must be totally decriminalised.This means a mass mobilisation as previously when the 1967 act was brought in andwhen previous threats to abortion rights were seen off. The Government certainlycannot be relied upon to defend these rights won in struggle. Last summer in astatement on gender equality following a conference of freedom of religion , anycommitment to abortion rights was omitted.https://www.anarchistcommunism.org/2023/06/17/abortion-rights-under-threat/_________________________________________A - I N F O S N E W S S E R V I C EBy, For, and About AnarchistsSend news reports to A-infos-en mailing listA-infos-en@ainfos.ca
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