Saturday, July 1, 2017

United Nations Human Rights Committee Pressures Ireland to Legalize Abortion (Pray That In This Case The UN Fails World Wide) Carl

United Nations Human Rights Committee Pressures Ireland to Legalize Abortion

 INTERNATIONAL   JONATHAN ABBAMONTE   JUN 30, 2017   |   6:07PM    WASHINGTON, DC
A recent decision handed down by the United Nations Human Rights Committee (CCPR) has once again condemned Ireland for maintaining laws that protect the right to life for the unborn. The decision is now the second time in the last year that the CCPR has attempted to intervene on Ireland’s national sovereignty, pressuring the country to legalize abortion.
The New York-based abortion advocacy law group, the Center for Reproductive Rights (CRR), petitioned the CCPR on behalf of the alleged victim, Siobhán Whelan. Whelan had traveled to the United Kingdom in 2010 to abort her child at 20 weeks gestation after her child had been diagnosed with a tragic fetal disability and had been declared “incompatible with life.”
Whelan, via her legal counsel, petitioned the CCPR in 2014, alleging that Ireland’s pro-life laws subjected her to “cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment” and “intense stigma for terminating her pregnancy.”
The CCPR sided with the complainant, finding Ireland to be in violation of several articles of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights including a violation of Whelan’s right to privacy, discrimination on the basis of sex, and “cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment.”
The CCPR directed the Irish Government to pay Whelan compensation fees and to provide her with any needed psychological treatment. The CCPR also instructed the Irish Government to legalize abortion by whatever means necessary, even if such remedy requires a change in Ireland’s Constitution.
The CCPR leveled the same accusation against the Irish Government last November in a similar case brought forward by Amanda Jane Millet and the CRR. The Irish Government agreed to pay Millet €30,000 in reparation for the alleged offenses.
The decision handed down by the CCPR this month is only the most recent instance of the onslaught of pro-abortion activism heaped on Ireland in recent months.
Numerous pro-abortion nongovernmental organizations, like Amnesty International and the Irish Family Planning Association, International Planned Parenthood Federation’s Member Association in Ireland, have lobbied heavily for the legalization of abortion in Ireland.
Several multilateral institutions have also attempted to sway the debate. Earlier this year, the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW)—a human rights treaty-based body similar to CCPR that monitors the implementation of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women—demanded that Ireland legalize abortion in cases of rape, incest, fetal disability, and physical and mental health of the mother.
This past March, Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights, Nils Muižnieks, also called on Ireland to legalize abortion under the same cases. Muižnieks has called for Ireland to legalize abortion in spite of a decision handed down by the Council of Europe’s European Court of Human Rights in 2010 which upheld Ireland’s right to keep abortion illegal in the landmark case A, B and C v. Ireland. As recently as December of 2014, the Council of Europe found Ireland’s abortion laws satisfactory.
Abortion is illegal in Ireland except to save the life of the mother. The Eighth Amendment to Ireland’s Constitution guarantees the right to life for the unborn and “as far as practicable, by its laws to defend and vindicate that right.” The Eighth Amendment was ratified by popular referendum in 1983 with the approval of over two-thirds of the voters.
However, various referenda and judicial decisions have since gradually eroded Ireland’s laws defending life.
In 1992, the Supreme Court of Ireland ruled in Attorney General v. X that the Eighth Amendment did not preclude mothers from terminating the life of their unborn child in cases where it is determined that she is at-risk for suicide. A pair of popular referenda that same year amended the Constitution to prohibit the state from protecting the interests of the child through limiting information about the availability of abortion in other countries or by preventing women to travel abroad for the express purpose of aborting their child. As a result, several pro-abortion organizations in Ireland have since routinely facilitated women in traveling to other countries to abort their unborn children.
Recent intense pressure from pro-abortion advocates both in Ireland and abroad have forced Irish lawmakers to move forward with a referendum on the Eighth Amendment. Earlier this month, Ireland’s new Prime Minister Leo Varadkar announced before the Dáil (Ireland’s main legislative assembly) that his government will allow a repeal referendum on the Eighth Amendment to be placed on the ballot next year.
The CCPR alleges that Ireland’s pro-life laws are not in line with the state’s obligations under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR).[1] However, the assertion is questionable as there does not appear to be any obligation for states to legalize abortion under the treaty nor under the standards of international law.
What the ICCPR says about abortion
The ICCPR is a United Nations human rights treaty that was adopted by the General Assembly in 1966 and came into force ten years later after the required number of countries had ascended to the treaty. Because ICCPR is a treaty, countries that have either ratified or acceded to the treaty (i.e. countries that are “state parties” to the treaty) are legally bound to observe it. Almost every United Nations recognized entity has become a state party to the Covenant.
The CCPR was created by the ICCPR to monitor the implementation of the treaty. CCPR conducts periodic reviews of state parties to determine the status of compliance with the Covenant and to act as an intermediary when a state party claims that another state party is in violation of the treaty.
ICCPR has two optional protocols. Optional protocols are additional provisions that state parties to the treaty are not required to adopt but have the option to do so. Once acceded to, however, optional protocols are not provisions that state parties have the “option” of following; they are legally bound by them in the same way they are bound by the provisions of the treaty.
The First Optional Protocol to the ICCPR allows individual citizens or persons within the jurisdiction of a state party to petition the CCPR on alleged state party violations of the Covenant. Because it is much easier for an individual activist to petition the CCPR to call for a change in the abortion laws in one’s own country than it is for the government of one state party invoke its privilege under the treaty to pressure another state party into complying with alleged violations of the treaty, pro-abortion activists have exploited the optional protocol on a number of occasions to advance their ideological agenda. As the CCPR has advocated pro-abortion positions for some time now, the treaty body has become a major conduit for pro-abortion activism on the international stage.
Ireland, as a state party to ICCPR and both of the treaty’s optional protocols, is legally bound by these documents. The United States is a state party to the ICCPR but not to its optional protocols.
Despite the legally binding nature of the Covenant on Ireland, however, neither the ICCPR nor its optional protocols ever mention abortion.
According to Ernie Walton, Director of the Center for Global Justice, Human Rights, and the Rule of Law at the Regent University School of Law, independent states are generally free to act where international law does not explicitly limit it.
“Except for a few minor exceptions, states are free to act except where they limit their ability to act,” Walton says, “the state is sovereign and equal and can only be bound by international law where they give consent, whether through treaties or in cases where states act out of a belief that they have an obligation to do so under international law.”
Rather than asserting a supposed “right” to abortion, the ICCPR guarantees the right to life, declaring that “every human being has the inherent right to life….no one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his life.”[2] State parties to the Covenant must protect these rights for every individual within their jurisdiction without distinction on the status of any kind.[3]
While the CCPR is able to interpret the Covenant, there are limits to the extent to which the Committee can interpret the treaty.
“The Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties lays out conditions under which treaties must be interpreted and the Committee is bound, and should be bound, by that,” Walton says.
According to the Vienna Convention on the Laws of Treaties, treaties must be “interpreted in good faith in accordance with the ordinary meaning to be given to the terms of the treaty in their context and in the light of its object and purpose.”[4] As Ireland and many other state parties to the ICCPR would have never intended at the time of accession that the language of Covenant mandates the legalization of abortion, it is clear that no honest interpretation of the treaty can read any “right” to an abortion into the document. And because abortion cannot be read into the treaty with the “ordinary meaning” given to the terms of the treaty, the fact that Ireland did not express reservations to provisions of the treaty that purportedly mandate the legalization of abortion at the time of accession is immaterial.
On the contrary, it would seem that the ICCPR would have to be interpreted as erring on the side of unborn life. Article 6(5) of the treaty prohibits the death penalty to be carried out on a pregnant woman, a provision that appears to recognize the life of the unborn child.
“On the issue of abortion, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights at best grants a right to life for the unborn and at worst is utterly silent,” Walton says.

What customary international law says about abortion
International law is the rules and norms that apply to several independent states through agreement, practice, or otherwise. International law can be derived from a variety of sources including formal agreements between states such as the ICCPR. International law can also be derived from customary international law, general principles common to the legal systems of various states, or other sources.
Certain norms of international law are said to be peremptory norms (jus cogens). Peremptory norms of international law are standards by which all states must comply without qualification and without exception. No treaty, pattern of law, or formal recognition is needed to enforce them. Actions that violate jus cogens law include crimes such as genocide.
But legalized abortion is clearly not a peremptory norm. And as international agreements such as the ICCPR do not mention abortion and it is not the clear and consistent understanding of states that such treaties obligate states to legalize abortion, could it be argued that Ireland would be required to legalize abortion under its obligations under customary international law?
How customary international law is defined is often subject to debate, but it is generally agreed that it is derived from the “general and consistent practice of states” and that states follow such practice from “a sense of legal obligation.”[5] Customary law can be derived from a variety of sources including the laws and practices of states, treaties, official pronouncements made by governments, the proceedings of international courts and multilateral organizations such as the United Nations, and even (to a lesser extent) the writings and opinions of international law scholars when they are in confluence with the general practice of states.
States, however must provide their consent out of a sense of legal obligation or must fail to dissent at the time such customary law is being developed in order to be bound by it. According to the American Law Institute’s Restatement of the Law (Third), Foreign Relations Law of the United States, “a practice that is generally followed but which states feel legally free to disregard does not contribute to customary law.”[6]
On issue of the legalization of abortion, however, there is hardly any consensus among states.
Under the conditions for abortion legalization outlined by CEDAW—including rape, incest, fetal disability, and physical and mental health—there is no consensus among states that would be binding under customary international law. Currently, a majority (55%) of UN recognized states do not permit abortion under even the minimum conditions stipulated by CEDAW.[7]
“In order for abortion access to be considered a binding obligation under customary international law, we would have to see nearly every country legalize abortion and do so out of some sense of a legal obligation,” Walton says.
In fact, it would seem that the CCPR and other human rights bodies are violating the international consensus on abortion when pressuring the countries to legalize such terminations. According to the Programme of Action of the International Conference on Population and Development, a consensus document agreed to by 179 nations at the 1994 International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) in Cairo, “in no case should abortion be promoted as a method of family planning.”[8] States at the ICPD further agreed that the question of abortion legalization lies solely with independent states:
Any measures or changes related to abortion within the health system can only be determined at the national or local level according to the national legislative process.[9]
International law, it would seem, errs heavier on the side of defending the right to life than it does in taking it away. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights declares that “everyone has the right to life.”[10]
The CCPR has even acknowledged that the right to life is a fundamental right, “the supreme right from which no derogation is permitted even in time of public emergency.”[11] It is contrary to CCPR’s own rules to interpret the right to life narrowly:
The expression “inherent right to life” cannot properly be understood in a restrictive manner, and the protection of this right requires that States adopt positive measures.[12]
It would thus appear that it is the mandate of the United Nations Human Right Committee to defend the right to life, rather than to attempt to take it away.
Fortunately, there are ways through the democratic process to remedy the CCPR’s resolve to trample on the inviolable right to life. CCPR members are not elected to serve terms indefinitely. The terms for half of the members that currently sit on the Human Rights Committee expire at the end of next year.
As a great deal of pro-abortion activism at the United Nations comes from the Human Rights Committee, UN member states should seek in earnest to elect well qualified human rights experts that will uphold the principles of national sovereignty, the rule of law, and the right to life for all.
† An “X” merely indicates that the member participated in the case. There is no indication whether the member actually voted for or against the concurring opinion as voting takes places by secret ballot. ‡ In 2015, Yuval Shany, together with former CCPR member Nigel Rodley, proposed the draft text for General Comment No. 36 which would have made abortion and suicide exceptions under the right to life (article 6) guaranteed by the ICCPR. Sources: http://www.ohchr.org/EN/HRBodies/CCPR/Pages/Membership.aspx; Human Rights Committee, Views adopted by the committee under article 5(4) of the optional protocol, concerning communication no. 2425/2014. June 12, 2017. CCPR/C/119/D/2425/2014.

[1]
 References to “ICCPR,” “Covenant,” or “the treaty” in this article all refer to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
[2] International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, article 6, New York, Dec. 16, 1966 (No. 14668), 999 U.N.T.S. 171.
[3] Ibid, articles 2(1) and 26.
[4] Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, article 31, May 23, 1969 (No. 18232), 1155 U.N.T.S. 331.
[5] Restatement of the Law Third, Foreign Relations Law of the United States §102 (American Law Institute 1987).
[6] Ibid.
[7] This statistic is derived from the status of abortion laws according to: United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division (2014). Abortion Policies and Reproductive Health around the World. Sales No. E.14.XIII.11. The status of abortion laws since 2013 have been brought up-to-date through Population Research Institute research.
[8] United Nations International Conference on Population and Development (1994).Programme of Action of the International Conference on Population and Development. 13 September. A/CONF.171/13/Rev.1.
[9] Ibid.
[10] United Nations, General Assembly (1948). Universal declaration of human rights, article 3. 10 December. A/RES/217(III).
[11] United Nations, Human Rights Committee (1984). General comment no. 14: article 6 (right to life).
[12] United Nations, Human Rights Committee (1982). General comment no. 6: article 6 (right to life).
LifeNews Note: Jonathan Abbamonte writes for the Population Research Institute.


The Pro-Life Movement is Winning the Battle to End Abortion, Here’s Why (Not Until It Is Illegal & Never Done Again In America) Carl

The Pro-Life Movement is Winning the Battle to End Abortion, Here’s Why

 OPINION   CAROL TOBIAS   JUN 30, 2017   |   10:06AM    WASHINGTON, DC
These are the opening remarks delivered this morning to the annual NRLC National Convention by National Right to Life President Carol Tobias.
Good morning! I am so excited that you are all here in the great city of Milwaukee to celebrate LIFE at the 47th annual National Right to Life convention.
Our theme, “Keeping Tomorrow Alive,” demonstrates our excitement and optimism about the future. We expect great things from this convention, and even greater achievements when we all return home to put into action what we have learned.
We have fantastic speakers with us this week. Ben Shapiro is here to get us started. We will also hear from David Daleiden, Ann McIlhenny, Ryan Bomberger, Wesley Smith, and Carter Snead. We are honored to have Wisconsin leaders here—Rebecca Klayfish and Brad Schimal. On Saturday, we will have former Congressman James Sensenbrenner, and tomorrow morning, not listed on your printed schedule– Governor Scott Walker.
Add to that amazing list an extensive array of speakers and topics with all the workshops and the “Gosnell” movie tomorrow night. You won’t want to miss any of these next three days.
If you hear something you want to share with the world, please use the hashtag NRLC2017. That’s #NRLC2017. And if you don’t know what that means or you want to learn more about it, then you might want to attend one of our many workshops on how to use social media to advance the cause of life. #NRLC2017
The Right-to-Life movement has been in existence for about 50 years. Many of our state affiliates were organizing long before the Supreme Court decisions of Roe v Wade and Doe v Bolton. While most people would have accepted abortion as “settled” law, there were pro-life heroes who decided to fight, determined to awaken the conscience of America to the plight of her littlest, most vulnerable ones.
Some of those early organizers are no longer with us, having gone on to eternal life. Fortunately, many of those early organizers are still with us, laboring in the fields with the many, many more who have joined the fight.
Although those early organizers were hopeful that there would be a quick end to abortion, their efforts helped keep tomorrow alive by continuing the struggle and bringing new recruits into this battle for Life. Keeping Tomorrow Alive is now up to us.
Follow LifeNews.com on Instagram for pro-life pictures.
This is two-fold theme. We keep tomorrow alive by bringing more and more people into the right-to-life movement to keep this fight going; people who will work beside us in our endeavors to protect innocent human life. But it’s also about an idea, a goal, that human life is to be valued and cherished and respected. Life is to be lived!
Throughout history, there has always been death and destruction. There has always been the leader or the government who didn’t care about people, or who placed one group of people above others. Our objective, our vision, is to make the death of innocent human beings unthinkable. We keep tomorrow alive by establishing a standard that human life is precious.
Certainly, we face challenges. We live in a society where too many people think unborn children have no more rights than an appendix. We are dealing with a culture that increasingly believes children who may have disabilities would be better off never being born.
There is increasing pressure on people with disabilities to opt for assisted suicide. Some insurance companies and a state-run health plan in Oregon have offered to pay for assisted suicide for patients, rather than life-sustaining treatments. Legislatures are continuously pushed to legalize assisted suicide because our society can’t imagine why anyone would want to live with an illness or disability.
And, of course, we deal with the Planned Parenthood pablum that abortion is “health care.”
But pro-lifers are eternally optimistic—we know we will win. We are encouraged that more and more people are getting involved in the fight against abortion and euthanasia.
We keep tomorrow alive by changing hearts and minds, educating newcomers and bringing them into the movement; by educating our young people so that they have the arguments to bolster their pro-life convictions, and by helping women who have aborted a son or a daughter to realize that they are welcomed and encouraged to join our ranks in the fight to protect innocent human life.
We know our efforts are working. Earlier this year, we found out that 926,190 abortions had been performed in 2014. That is the first time since 1974 that the number of abortions performed in the United States dropped below one million. That is a 42% drop from our all-time high of 1.6 million abortions in 1990. Abortion rates and ratios are at their lowest point since 1973. We are making a difference because more and more women are choosing life for their children.
We keep tomorrow alive by making our voices heard in the voting booth as we elect more pro-life candidates each election cycle, seeing pro-life legislation passed and pro-life policies enacted, at both federal and state levels.
One great example of political success making a difference is the new version of the Mexico City Policy. When President Trump issued a Memorandum in January, he didn’t just reinstate the Mexico City Policy that had been rescinded by President Obama, he broadened it and renamed it “Protecting Life in Global Health Assistance.” The revision covered more programs and agencies than previously covered, placing restrictions on more funds than the original policy. The United States is raising the banner for LIFE throughout the world. We are not going to tell poor, developing countries that the way to improve their living conditions is by killing their children.
Pro-life political success also translates into the appointment of a well-qualified, very intelligent justice to the Supreme Court. I’ll admit, I enjoyed reading the reactions some people had on Twitter when Supreme Court decisions on other issues came down this week. Some tweeters had apparently just realized that Justice Gorsuch is a conservative– and he could be on the Court for 30 years! Oh, what horror! No, what joy!
We are having success in state legislatures as we pass more laws to protect unborn children who can feel pain and to prevent the killing of unborn babies by the gruesome dismemberment abortion. States are enacting laws to require that women seeking an abortion be given the opportunity to view an ultrasound of her unborn child.
And an exciting new proposal– passed in four states now– that women seeking a chemical abortion must be told that if she changes her mind after the first step in the process, it may be possible to reverse the effects of that chemical abortion. There are a few hundred children living today because their moms sought help and did not complete the abortion process.
And an amazing fact that we celebrate is that 17 states, this year, had measures to legalize assisted suicide; every one of those efforts failed. This battle is by no means over, but that is a huge victory.
And we know that public opinion is coming our way. A Gallup poll, conducted last month, found that 54% of Americans think abortion should be illegal or legal only in a few circumstances, compared to 42% who think abortion should be legal under any or most circumstances.
Life is winning as we see more and more young people getting involved. I’m excited to have the National Teens for Life convention here. This is the 32nd annual convention for young people eager to learn and to meet other from around the country. Their enthusiasm, new ideas, and boldness will have an impact on generations to come.
We have high school students from around the country who will compete Saturday in our national oratory contest.
And also here are college students participating in the college-accredited National Right to Life Academy, now in its 11th year.
The energy, enthusiasm, commitment, and dedication of every pro-lifer will bring us much closer to that inevitable day when abortion, assisted suicide, euthanasia, and the devaluing of innocent human life are thrown onto the ash heap of history. We will keep tomorrow alive—both in the day-to-day battle and the long-run vision for America. Life is precious.


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