Tuesday, June 2, 2009

From New York Times: Abortion Doctor Slain by Gunman in Kansas Church

June 1, 2009

By JOE STUMPE and MONICA DAVEY

WICHITA, Kan. George Tiller, one of only a few doctors in the nation who performed abortions late in pregnancy, was shot to death here Sunday in the foyer of his longtime church as he handed out the church bulletin.

The authorities said they took a man into custody later in the day after pulling him over about 170 miles away on Interstate 35 near Kansas City. They said they expected to charge him with murder on Monday.

The Wichita police said there were several witnesses to the killing, but law enforcement officials would not say what had been said, if anything, inside the foyer. Officials offered little insight into the motive, saying that they believed it was the act of an isolated individual but that they were also looking into his history, his family, his associates.

A provider of abortions for more than three decades, Dr. Tiller, 67, had become a focal point for those around the country who opposed it. In addition to protests outside his clinic, his house and his church, Dr. Tiller had once seen his clinic bombed; in 1993, an abortion opponent shot him in both arms. He was also the defendant in a series of legal challenges intended to shut down his operations, including two grand juries that were convened after citizen-led petition drives.

On Sunday morning, moments after services had begun at Reformation Lutheran Church, Dr. Tiller, who was acting as an usher, was shot once with a handgun, the authorities said. The gunman pointed the weapon at two people who tried to stop him, the police said, then drove off in a powder-blue Taurus. Dr. Tiller's wife, Jeanne, a member of the church choir, was inside the sanctuary at the time of the shooting.

The police in Wichita described the man who was detained as a 51-year-old from Merriam, a Kansas City suburb, but declined to give his name until he was charged. The Associated Press reported that a sheriff's official from Johnson County, Kan., where the man was taken into custody, identified him as Scott Roeder.

The killing of Dr. Tiller is likely to return the issue of abortion to center stage in the nation's political debate. Until recently, President Obama, who supports abortion rights, had largely sought to avoid the debate. Last month, he confronted the issue in a commencement speech at the University of Notre Dame, an appearance that drew protests because of his views. During the speech, he appealed to each side to respect one another's basic decency and to work together to reduce the number of unwanted pregnancies.

Mr. Obama issued a statement after Dr. Tiller's killing, saying, However profound our differences as Americans over difficult issues such as abortion, they cannot be resolved by heinous acts of violence.

Advocates of abortion rights denounced the killing, saying it would send a renewed, frightening signal to others who provide abortions or work in clinics and to women who may consider abortions. Some described Dr. Tiller as one of about only three doctors in the country who had, under certain circumstances, provided abortions to women in their third trimester of pregnancy, and said his death would mean that women, particularly in the central United States, would have few if any options in such cases.

This is a tremendous loss on so many levels, said Peter B. Brownlie, president of Planned Parenthood of Kansas and Mid-Missouri, who had known Dr. Tiller for years.

Opponents of abortion, including those here who have been most vociferous in their protests of Dr. Tiller and his work, also expressed outrage at the shooting and said they feared that their groups might be wrongly judged by the act.

Troy Newman, the president of Operation Rescue, an anti-abortion group based in Wichita, said he had always sought out nonviolent measures to challenge Dr. Tiller, including efforts in recent years to have him prosecuted for crimes or investigated by state health authorities.

Operation Rescue has worked tirelessly on peaceful, nonviolent measures to bring him to justice through the legal system, the legislative system, Mr. Newman said, adding, We are pro-life, and this act was antithetical to what we believe.

By late Sunday, Mr. Newman said, some were already suggesting that there were links between the suspect and Operation Rescue. Someone named Scott Roeder had made posts to the group's blog in the past, Mr. Newman said, but he is not a friend, not a contributor, not a volunteer.

Dr. Tiller's death is the first such killing of an abortion provider in this country since 1998, when Dr. Barnett Slepian was shot by a sniper in his home in the Buffalo area. Dr. Tiller was the fourth doctor in the United States who performed abortions to be killed in such circumstances since 1993, statistics from abortion rights groups show.

Although most of the deadly violence occurred in the 1990s, advocates said, abortion clinics and doctors have continued to be the targets of intense, sometimes threatening protests. Some said they feared that Dr. Tiller's death might signal a return to the earlier level of violence. At some clinics on Sunday, administrators were reviewing their security precautions.

Adam Watkins, 20, one of the church members, told The A.P. he was seated in the middle of the congregation when he heard a small pop at the start of the service. An usher came in and told the congregation to remain seated, and then escorted Mrs. Tiller out. When she got to the back doors, we heard her scream, Mr. Watkins said.

Dr. Tiller had long been at the center of the abortion debate here, one that rarely seemed to quiet much in this southern Kansas city of about 358,000.

In 1993, Rachelle Shannon, from rural Oregon, shot Dr. Tiller in both arms. Two years earlier, during Operation Rescue's Summer of Mercy protests, thousands of anti-abortion protesters tried to block off the clinic, the site of a bombing in 1986.

Friends of Dr. Tiller also described regular incidents of vandalism at the clinic, and a barrage of threats to him and his family, threats they say had concerned him deeply for years.

Family members, including 4 children and 10 grandchildren, issued a statement through Dr. Tiller’s lawyer, which read in part: George dedicated his life to providing women with high-quality health care despite frequent threats and violence. We ask that he be remembered as a good husband, father and grandfather and a dedicated servant on behalf of the rights of women everywhere.

In recent years, Dr. Tiller had also been the focus of efforts by anti-abortion groups and others, including a former state attorney general, Phill Kline, who wished to see him prosecuted for what they considered violations of state law in cases of late-term abortions.

Two grand juries, summoned by citizen-led petition drives, looked into Dr. Tiller’s practices, including questions of whether he met a state law requirement that abortions at or after 22 weeks of pregnancy be limited to circumstances where a fetus would not be viable or a woman would otherwise face substantial and irreversible impairment of a major bodily function words whose interpretation were at the root of much debate.

This year, Dr. Tiller was acquitted in a case that raised questions about whether he was too closely tied to a doctor from whom he sought second opinions in abortion cases. As recently as this spring, the State Board of Healing Arts was investigating a similar complaint against him.

Joe Stumpe reported from Wichita, Kan., and Monica Davey from Chicago.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

CORK WOMEN'S HEALTH MANIFESTO: On International Day of Action on Women's Health, 28 May 2009

All people in Ireland have the right to the highest possible standard of physical, mental, and emotional health and well-being. Equal access to affordable, quality health care is essential to promoting this right. Women are often more heavily – and negatively - impacted by lack of access to health services, facilities and care programmes, especially in this period of economic crisis. Women from a variety of organisations in Cork City recently gathered to discuss the need to highlight women's priority issues concerning their health and the health of their families and communities. In recognition of the International Day of Action on Women's Health today (28 May 2009), we have identified four main priority issues in relation to women's health in Cork:

Carers — We endorse the Family Carers Manifesto in calling for recognition of the importance of care work and that women do the majority of it with little recognition or support. Family Carers are asking local representatives and MEP’s to lobby for the publication and implementation of the Family Carers Strategy, the introduction of a needs assessment, and a free annual medical check-up for all family carers. Please contact the Carers Association (www.carersireland.com) for more information on their Manifesto.


Violence — We demand recognition of the health impacts of violence, including sexual violence, domestic violence, child abuse, female genital mutilation, trafficking/prostitution, and the provision of services and facilities that provide treatment, counselling, accommodation, and post-traumatic after-care for victims of violence. For more information on this issue, please visit the Sexual Violence Centre Cork website (www.sexualviolence.ie) and the Dublin Rape Crisis Centre website (www.drcc.ie).


Reproductive Health — We demand access to safe, affordable and legal reproductive and sexual health services in Ireland. The diversity of Irish society should be reflected in policy on reproductive rights. Many women consider that access, not only to effective contraception but also to emergency contraception (the ‘morning-after pill) and abortion are conscientious choices. Abortion is a social reality in Ireland. Over the past thirty years at least 130,000 Irish women have exercised their right to choose in Britain or, more recently, in Euro zone countries such as the Netherlands. The current situation is inequitable as it results in a two-tiered system of eligibility for health care, where abortion services are accessible only to those who are free to travel to Britain and can afford to do so. This impacts not only on women living in poverty but on migrant women and asylum seekers, within whose cultures access to full reproductive choices is considered a woman's right. For more information on this issue, contact Cork Women's Right to Choose at cork.womens.right.to.choose@gmail.com.


Access and Information — We demand an end to the two-tier health system in order to provide equal access to health services and facilities for all. Many people, especially women, experience confusion, excessively long waits, and lack of confidence in trying to access the health system. Services and facilities are simply not available, for example a rehab centre in Cork for girls experiencing drug addition, and/or not advertised, such as cancer testing facilities. The government and the HSE must take responsibility in providing better community outreach and equal care to all. We demand better and more reliable information about services and facilities, better communication around health needs in the various communities, and better access to translation facilities.


SUPPORT WOMEN'S HEALTH ISSUES IN CORK

We have written this manifesto to bring home to candidates in the upcoming European and local elections how essential these issues are to a great many women. Women's diverse perspectives and experiences MUST be taken into account in provision of health care.

We call on candidates to commit to making them a priority in their campaigns in advance of the elections on 5th June 2009 and to highlight those concerns within their parties.

We call on them to listen to their electorate, the users of the health system, and commit themselves and their political parties to promote and enable those changes that are essential to the delivery of fair and equal access to high quality health care for everyone in Ireland.

Health is a human right.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Press Release from Northern Ireland FPA

UN Committee concludes that abortion law in Northern Ireland should be amended
27 May 2009

For the third time in ten years, another United Nations human rights monitoring body has recommended that the abortion law in Northern Ireland should be amended and better protection afforded to women’s human rights. The United Nations Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, the monitoring body of the Convention on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights met in Geneva on the 12 and 13 of May 2009, to examine the UK and Northern Ireland government. In its concluding observations, the Committee recommended that the abortion law in Northern Ireland should be brought into line with the rest of the UK. It stated:

“The Committee calls upon the State party to amend the abortion law of Northern Ireland to bring it in line with the 1967 Abortion Act with a view to preventing clandestine and unsafe abortions in cases of rape, incest or foetal abnormality.”

Reacting to the Committee’s recommendations, Dr Audrey Simpson, fpa Director Northern Ireland said:

“Once again the ongoing discrimination of Northern Ireland women has been acknowledged in Europe. It is totally unacceptable for the UK Government and the Northern Ireland Assembly to continue to ignore UN human rights monitoring bodies. It is a blatant disregard for women’s human rights in relation to their reproductive health.”

http://www.fpa.org.uk/News/Press/Pressreleases2009/27May2009

Monday, May 18, 2009

Check Out This YouTube Video!

Last year, Choice Ireland (www.choiceireland.org) initiated a month of action against the WRC, a rogue counselling clinic at 50 Upper Dorset Street in Dublin.




If you know of or have any information about 'clinics' in Cork City providing false or misleading information to women seeking crisis pregnancy counselling, please contact us at: cork.womens.right.to.choose@gmail.com. Women and men have the right to the truth!

Thursday, May 14, 2009

The kindness of strangers who helped Irish women abandoned by the State

From The Irish Times
Thu, May 07, 2009


ANTHEA McTEIRNAN


BOOK OF THE DAY: ANTHEA McTEIRNAN reviews Ireland’s Hidden Diaspora: the “abortion trail” and the making of a London-Irish Underground, 1980-2000 by Anne Rossiter IASC publications pp 237, €8

IT IS to this island’s shame that it continues to abandon half its population to a reliance on the kindness of strangers.

This year, almost 5,000 women from the Republic and 1,500 women from Northern Ireland will be forced to travel to England to have an abortion. They will do so in trepidation, in fear, often in debt and in secrecy.

Since abortion was legalised in Britain in 1967, it is calculated that more than 150,000 Irish women have had terminations there.

These women are our mothers, aunts, grandmothers, sisters, cousins. They are us.

They were forced to be strong and ingenious to escape two very different States with one very common purpose – to deny them the right to choose.

On their challenging journeys, if they were lucky, some of these women may have encountered the generosity, thoughtfulness and solidarity of a remarkable bunch of people.

Anne Rossiter, a long-standing campaigner on women’s issues, a native of Bruree, Co Limerick, who has lived in London for a quarter of a century, is one of them.

Her scholarly, yet accessible account of the workings of the Irish Women’s Abortion Support Group (IWASG) and the Irish Abortion Solidarity Campaign, is a valuable piece of work.

Peppered with first-person accounts, it gives voice to the women who held out a hand to those forced to leave their homeland to travel to a strange city to have an abortion.

The abortion taboo remains paralysingly strong for Irish women, but this is not a book full of anonymous stories of anonymous women who have had terminations. It is, rather, an account of the times and modus operandi of the informal support and information networks that came to the aid of those women who needed them.

In the 1980s, being Irish in London was no cakewalk. Those campaigning for reproductive rights in Ireland were caught between a rock and a hard place. With anti-Irish racism tangible, highlighting issues that could be used to have a negative impact on the Irish community in Britain was problematic. Also, the hold of the Catholic Church on many Irish community organisations in Britain silenced discussion on reproductive justice. A double whammy, so to speak.

In Ireland’s Hidden Diaspora , Rossiter has woven a tapestry of social and political history that is often marginalised, frequently disregarded, but indisputably precious.

The book is a treasure trove of information that will take many who lived through the height of the Greater London Council years in 1980s London down memory lane.

And yet this is a book mindful of the very recent past and the future too. In the North of Ireland, following the defeat in January of her private members bill seeking to extend Britains 1967 Abortion Act to Northern Ireland, MP Diane Abbott has filed an Early Day Motion calling for the British government to “provide funding for women in Northern Ireland to access abortion services in Britain”.

In the Republic, three women are taking a case to the European Court of Human Rights, arguing that their human rights were breached because they had to travel to have an abortion. If successful, both moves will trigger radical legal change.

The trouble with history is that it is usually just that – his story. Anne Rossiter has preserved an important chapter in the history of Irish women. For that, and for meeting those scared women at the airport, for carrying their bags, for taking them home, for feeding them, listening to them, helping them to find their way in an unfamiliar city, she is owed an enormous debt of gratitude. Thank goodness for kind strangers.

Anthea McTeirnan is an Irish Times journalist and a member of the board of the Irish Family Planning Association

© 2009 The Irish Times

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Back Up Your Birth Control with Emergency Contraception

From the Guttmacher Institute, March 23, 2009:

March 25, 2009, marks the eighth anniversary of the Back Up Your Birth Control Day of Action, a day devoted to increasing awareness of and access to emergency contraception, sometimes called Plan B or the “morning-after pill.”

The typical American woman wants two children. To achieve this, she spends only a few years trying to become or being pregnant, but about three decades trying to avoid pregnancy. That effort poses a daunting challenge.

Recent Guttmacher research documents the difficulty women confront in using contraception consistently and correctly over a lifetime. Finding the “right” contraceptive method is not a one-time decision—rather, it is a series of choices in response to women’s changing life circumstances and contraceptive needs.

The study found that life changes, such as the beginning or end of a relationship, a job loss or change, moving to a new home or a personal crisis, can contribute to lapses in contraceptive use, increasing the risk of unprotected sex. That’s why emergency contraception, a back-up birth control method, can play a key role in helping women ensure that a contraceptive lapse or failure does not lead to unintended pregnancy. Health care providers are especially well positioned to counsel women about the potential impact of life events on their contraceptive use. They can also help women prepare for those transitions, as well as for potential method failures (like condoms breaking during sex) by providing emergency contraception to keep at hand in case it is needed and by educating them about its benefits and availability.

Emergency contraception has been available over-the-counter without a prescription to women and men aged 18 and older since August 2006. However, the Food and Drug Administration still requires women younger than 18 to obtain a prescription, a requirement that can cause delays in obtaining the method. Such delays increase a young woman’s risk of an unintended pregnancy: While emergency contraception can help prevent unintended pregnancy when taken up to 120 hours after unprotected sex, it is most effective the sooner it is taken.

Continued efforts to raise public awareness about emergency contraception are essential and should include debunking myths about the method. Many women and men still do not know that emergency contraception exists or are confused about how the method works. Emergency contraception contains the same hormones found in ordinary birth control pills. It will not in any way disrupt an established pregnancy. And it is not to be confused with mifepristone, sometimes called RU-486, a drug used to terminate a pregnancy that is only available and administered at clinics or doctor’s offices.

Much still remains to be done to help women and their partners improve their contraceptive use overall. The more we can identify and remove barriers to consistent use—while ensuring people know about and have access to a back-up method like emergency contraception—the better prepared women will be to avoid unintended pregnancies and plan for the children they want, when they want them.

Click here for more information on:

Back Up Your Birth Control Campaign

Achieving greater contraceptive convenience

Improving Contraceptive Use

Facts on Contraceptive Use

State Policies on Emergency Contraception

Thursday, March 12, 2009

UCC Societies Guild rejects application for pro-choice society

By Alan Davis, Indymedia, 12 March 2009:

The Societies Guild at UCC has twice rejected applications to set up a pro-choice society on campus on the spurious grounds that this issue is already covered by other groups - including in their first rejection the ludicrous suggestion that this was done by the anti-choice "Students for Life".


Timeline of the political censorship of pro-choice views at UCC.

Monday 26 January – Societies Guild turn down application to set up pro-choice society:

"Your society application was brought before the Guild last evening. Unfortunately status was not approved. It is a decision that was ultimately made by a previous Guild and is being upheld. 'A society already exists which caters for debate in the area of abortion and choice'. Membership to this and all societies is open to all students in UCC. Thank you for your interest and I hope you join one of the many societies in UCC."


Friday 30 January – President of the Students Union says in an email that the application was rejected “due to flaws in the constitution.”

Tuesday 10 February –The Societies Guild confirms by email that the other society is the anti-choice “Students for Life who deal with many issues such as abortion, stem cell research etc.”

Thursday 12 February – Societies Guild suggest meeting up to discuss the failed application.

Wednesday 18 February – Stall at UCC by pro-choice activists for 2 hours collects over 100 signatures on a petition calling for overturning the decision.

Monday 2 March – Meeting with the Societies Guild indicates that a proposal for a broader-based society would be accepted.

Monday 9 March – Societies Guild turns down second application for a much more broadly based society:

"Thank you for your proposal which was discussed at last nights Guild meeting. Unfortunately it was decided not to grant status of the UCC Pro-Choice society at this time. Since the health promotion issues are covered by the UCC Slainte society and the debates on the topics are covered by the UCC Philosophical society it was thought that a society already exists that could cater for your needs. This would limit the remit of the UCC Pro-Choice society as well as the membership.

"Thank you for your interest in any case and I hope that you get involved in one of the eighty-four societies in UCC."


This is a clear and blatant case of political censorship and must be opposed. Send messages calling for this outrageous political censorship to be overturned to the Societies Guild at susocieties@ucc.ie with copies to cork.womens.right.to.choose@gmail.com and prochoice.ucc@gmail.com.

Let us know, at prochoice.ucc@gmail.com, if you want to help with making a big splash at UCC in Freshers Week in September – the pro-choice message will not be silenced!

Link: http://www.indymedia.ie/article/91507