Hungarian doctors, opposition protest 'cruel' change in abortion rules
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[September 15, 2022]
BUDAPEST (Reuters) - Hungarian
doctors and some opposition parties protested on Wednesday against a
pending change in abortion rules that will require pregnant women to
prove they had seen a definitive sign of life from the foetus before
requesting the procedure.
Re-elected in April, nationalist Prime Minister Viktor Orban faces his
toughest term in power since a 2010 landslide with the forint skirting
all-time lows, energy costs surging and European Union funds in limbo
amid a row over democratic standards.
Orban, whose Fidesz party has amended the definition of family in the
constitution to allow an effective ban on adoption by same-sex couples,
is also locked in a legal battle with the EU executive over a law
curtailing LGBTQ+ rights.
Interior Minister Sandor Pinter submitted an amendment to abortion rules
this week requiring pregnant women to submit evidence from their
healthcare provider of a definitive sign of life, widely interpreted as
hearing the heartbeat of the foetus.
The changes were brought about by government decree and are set to take
effect on Thursday.
The Hungarian Medical Chamber said the largely procedural changes did
not go against its ethical code founded on the protection of life.
However, it said Orban's government should have launched a social
dialogue before implementing them, a practice often criticised by
various parts of society and business groups facing similar abrupt
changes in key legislation.
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Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban
delivers a speech after taking the oath of office in the Parliament
in Budapest, Hungary, May 16, 2022. REUTERS/Bernadett Szabo
The opposition Jobbik party welcomed
what it called a pro-life slant of the changes, but also criticised
the lack of consultation before the proposal was pushed ahead.
The liberal opposition Parbeszed party said the changes were
unacceptable and urged the interior minister to withdraw the decree.
"This amendment not only restricts the right of pregnant women to
terminate their pregnancies, but it creates an extremely onerous and
unnecessarily cruel situation for all involved as well as doctors,"
it said in a statement.
Some political analysts said the move could be aimed at clipping the
wings of the far-right Our Homeland party, which was elected into
parliament in April and originally campaigned for the changes.
"This could be a good tool to mobilise more conservative voters or
to prevent excessive gains for Our Homeland to the detriment of
Fidesz," said political analyst Attila Tibor Nagy.
Women's rights group Patent has called a rally against the changes
for late September.
(Reporting by Anita Komuves and Gergely Szakacs; Editing by
Bernadette Baum)
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