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Friday, July 12, 2013

Irish law will lead to abortion increase, Vatican expert predicts

Monsignor Jacques Suaudeau speaks with CNA during a July 12 2013 interview at the Academy for Life. 
 A scientist from the Pontifical Academy for Life says Ireland’s new abortion law will result in an increased number of children being aborted, especially because it does not involve enough doctors in the decision-making process.

“I would have liked to have had this law with a motion of at least three doctors, even in an emergency,” Monsignor Jacques Suaudeau said July 12.

“We are not in Tamanrasset (Algeria) or in Fulsara (India), we are in Ireland, so you could have three doctors. And at three you make the right judgment,” he remarked.

In his view, if the Irish politicians had passed the law with a clause that required three doctors to decide if a mother's life is really at risk, it “would have put the breaks on the abortion industry.”

Msgr. Suaudeau affirmed “people who brought this law into Ireland are liberals and want to go further; this is just the beginning.”

“This law has to be carefully limited and not used as a door to open up more and more abortion,” he told CNA in a July 12 interview at the Pontifical Academy for Life.

Ireland passed a law making abortion legal in the country for the first time in history after an Indian woman who was refused an abortion died because doctor’s failed to detect an E coli infection.

Abortion advocates seized on the case as an opportunity to legalize abortion and were met with a strong pro-life stand against their efforts.

“You can consider this (law) as a first step,” Msgr. Suaudeau remarked.

“I come from a country (France) that has abortion and the consequences are not so beautiful.”
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