I was recently
interviewed by Emily Graves of Crossrhythms Radio about that the failure of the
Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) to take action in cases of sex selection
abortions and pre-signing of abortion forms. The full
transcript is available on line and is reproduced here.
The CPS has opted to take no further action in regard to two
named doctors who sought to authorise abortions on grounds of sex selection in
2012. In a letter to Christian Medical Fellowship the Metropolitan Police said
that, although there is sufficient evidence for a realistic prospect of
conviction, it is not in the public interest to prosecute.
With regard to doctors at 14 NHS Trusts who pre-signed
abortion forms authorising abortions for women they had not actually seen, the
CPS has also opted not to act on grounds that 'the practice of pre-signing has
clearly evolved over a number of years', is 'clearly widespread' and may well
be due to 'clinical pressures' or 'good intention'.
Emily: Please could you give us a general picture of what
your position on abortion is at the Christian Medical Fellowship?
Dr Peter Saunders: We're opposed to abortion, because we
believe that all human life is made in the image of God and incredibly
precious. The whole Christian ethic is that the strong make sacrifices for the
weak - that's what Jesus did for us - and there's nothing more vulnerable and
more innocent and weaker than the baby in the womb. We believe that that baby
deserves legal protection and that to take the life of an innocent human being
is wrong. So that's where the position is based.
Emily: Tell us a little bit about the cases of
sex-selection abortions that have taken place in the UK.
Dr Peter Saunders: Well, the Daily Telegraph, a couple of
years ago, sent some of their undercover reporters to a number of abortion
clinics to ask for abortions purely on grounds of the baby being the wrong sex
and two doctors were secretly filmed authorising abortions on those grounds,
when in fact the Health Minister has been very clear that that's against the
law. That led to a police investigation and a report by the Crown Prosecution
Service, which has stirred up all the controversy.
Emily: There has been a rise, then, in cases of this
description?
Dr Peter Saunders: Well, there hasn't been clear evidence of
sex-selection abortions happening with any great frequency in Britain. But
abroad, particularly in South Asia - in India and in China - there have been a
large number of sex-selection abortions. In fact there are 160 million missing
females in those two countries as a result. And because there are Asian
populations here who favour boys, there's been a concern that there've been
undercover sex-selection abortions. The Telegraph sting was aimed at
identifying doctors who, presented with a case scenario, would actually go
ahead and authorise these abortions. Of course the people going were undercover
reporters and so no abortions were performed in these two situations, but it
was still against the law and the Crown Prosecution Service said that there was
enough evidence to prosecute these doctors, but they felt it wasn't in the
public interest to do it and that's what's caused all the uproar and
controversy.
Emily: We will talk a little more about that in a second, but what about these cases is particularly worrying, apart from the reaction from the Crown Prosecution Service?
Emily: We will talk a little more about that in a second, but what about these cases is particularly worrying, apart from the reaction from the Crown Prosecution Service?
Dr Peter Saunders: There's a range of opinion on abortion in
Britain as you would expect, from the pro-choice to pro-life end - but
abortions done purely on grounds of sex seem to unite everyone right across the
political spectrum and across the pro-choice/pro-life spectrum. What's been
striking about this is that a lot of the criticism has come from pro-choice
feminists, who are nonetheless strongly opposed to sex-selection abortion
because they believe in this case, that it discriminates against women and
undermines all the work they've been doing on trying to curb human trafficking
and sex abuse. So the Director of Public Prosecutions has attracted the wrath
of all sides because everyone, with a few exceptions, seems to be of the view
that, even if abortion is acceptable in some circumstances, that it's most
definitely not on grounds of sex-selection alone.
Emily: So what does pre-signing abortion forms actually
entail?
Dr Peter Saunders: This is another problem and this was
again identified as a result of a survey by the Care Quality Commission that
was carried out in response to an article in the Telegraph. They found that in
14 NHS Trusts doctors had pre-signed forms. Now what this means is that under
the Abortion Act, you can't have an abortion unless two doctors sign a special
statutory form to say that the conditions laid down in the Abortion Act apply.
What had happened in these 14 trusts was that doctors had gone through and
pre-signed a whole load of forms without seeing the women concerned, so in
other words it was left to just one doctor to authorise the abortion rather
than two. That is a form of perjury: it's knowingly and wilfully putting your
signature to a statutory document to say things that you know aren't actually
true. I think there will be more controversy on this as to why the Director of
Public Prosecutions didn't prosecute in the case of these NHS Trusts. He argued
that this is a widespread practice; well you know, speeding is a widespread
practice, but we still prosecute people who speed. It just seemed a ridiculous
argument. If the law is there and it's the will of Parliament, then it is the
Crown Prosecution Service's job to uphold the law; not to interpret it and let
people off just because a lot of people are breaking it. The problem with the
Abortion Act is that there has been pretty widespread, if not flagrant, abuse
of the provisions of the Act in a whole host of areas, of which pre-signing is
one.
Emily: So you've got two different things here: you've
got the pre-signing forms and you've got the doctors allowing these
sex-selection abortions to take place?
Dr Peter Saunders: Yes, actually authorising them to take
place.
Emily: Going back to the Crown Prosecution Service, what
has been their position on why they haven't gone and taken action?
Dr Peter Saunders: Well the Crown Prosecution Service
position on sex-selection was that there was enough evidence to prosecute but
it wasn't in the public interest to do so and on the forms it was just that
it's such a widespread practice that they essentially were going to let them
off. What they argued was that it's a matter for the General Medical Council,
not for the courts and that's what's provoked the huge reaction. Within hours
of this story appearing in the Telegraph, the Health Minister Jeremy Hunt had
asked the Attorney General Dominic Grieve to demand from the Crown Prosecution
Service an urgent clarification as to why they'd made this decision. Then the
next morning on the Radio 4 Today programme, the previous Director of Public
Prosecutions before the current one heavily criticised the Crown Prosecution
Service saying he didn't understand why they had made this decision. Then the
Shadow Attorney General, who is Labour and a pro-choice feminist woman, Emily
Thornberry, she wrote to the Crown Prosecution Service saying that they'd
undermined all the work they'd done on sexual abuse and this was inexcusable:
they were bypassing Parliament. Then everyone weighed in; we had 50 MPs writing
to the Telegraph saying that this was completely unacceptable and then the
General Medical Council itself said: Well, we're a regulatory body: it's not
our job to bring these doctors to task; it's up to the courts. There's been a
phenomenal amount of reaction.
Emily: Yeah, because really they're not doing the job
properly.
Dr Peter Saunders: Exactly! The Director of Public
Prosecutions is paid to head up the Crown Prosecution Service, which is meant
to uphold the law; if he's not upholding the law that's very, very serious.
Emily: So what does the Christian Medical Fellowship want
to see happen in order to tackle this issue?
Dr Peter Saunders: What we'd like to see is for the law to
be properly upheld and we believe that these two doctors should be prosecuted -
if there's enough evidence to do it, as the CPS has already said there is, they
should go ahead and prosecute them and hear their cases in court. If they're
convicted of illegal abortion then it should then at that point go to the
General Medical Council to decide whether these doctors should be struck off.
That's the proper procedure for it. If that doesn't happen then I'm sure there
will be more reaction from Parliament, but this issue isn't going away and we
haven't really seen the issue of pre-signing forms yet aired in the media but
that may well be coming as well because it's the same sort of problem of the CPS
not upholding the law.
Emily: How can we find out more about this issue?
Dr Peter Saunders: There's quite a lot on it on the
Christian Medical Fellowship blog, which you can access through our website;
there's lots in the newspapers, particularly in the Telegraph and other
Christian organisations like Christian Concern and The Christian Institute have
been covering it as well, but it's a story that's going to run and run and to
evolve further.
As Christians we believe that God puts the governing
authorities in place and he expects them to create or to uphold justice and
keep order and so it's very serious when, in a democratic society, laws have
been made and then they're not being properly upheld. I mean in a sense, it's
sending a signal to the world that Britain is open for business as far as
sex-selection abortion goes, if doctors can do it, authorise it and then not to
be brought to account when it's clearly against the law.
Doc
ReplyDeleteSo pro-choice (death) feminists believe sex-selective abortion is wrong; but, I thought for them it was a 'woman's right to choose'.
That is pro-choice!
Of course the pro-choice feminists are cornered here: once you argue that the baby has no high moral status as a human being - then their argument against sex-selective abortion is undermined.
It's only matter of time that youngsters, who hate hypocrisy from adults, see that the pro-choice movement is based on deception and lies - and ultimately for a lie to be maintained - it has to be maintained by violence to the leaping, kicking child in the womb.
So let me get this right.
ReplyDeleteThere is a child next door - we neighbours are looking forward to greeting a new member of our community.
Two 'bureaucrats' agree to sign his death warant - without permitting his lawyer to speak up for him.
Somebody next door phones for a taxi to take the kid to a coach station, the coach driver takes him to a railway station, the clerks in the institution record his visit.
The next thing we neighbours know is that the kid's dead body was used as fuel to heat the institution.
So there are lots of people involved in the kids death: we the neighbours who refused to look out and defend him; the telephone engineers that established the communication lines; the taxi driver that delivered him to the coach station; the coach driver that delivered him to the railway station (and the neat timetables drawn up by the busy railway clerks); the train driver that delivered the 'little lamb' to the correct city and the clerks who registered him in the institution.
The doctors, who swore to do no harm; the nurses (eat your heart out Nightingale!) who flushed his dismembered body parts into the sewer; the city cleaners who unblocked the drains: and the sea will finally give up its dead.
All of us, all of us, are guilty.
I just wish I wasn't a coward - there is one category of human actor who will not enter Heaven: that disgusting, cowering little coward.