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A review of the progress of the debate in international
circles over the last five years makes clear how timely was the
Encyclical "Evangelium vitae"[1]. The Encyclical
authoritatively presented the Church's position on an array of
threats to human life, especially at its beginning and at its end,
which are now taking on a new form inasmuch as they seek to be
recognized as rights.[2] In effect, in the years following the
publication of the Encyclical, the fundamental moments of human
life, as well as the transmission of life, have been present in an
unprecedented way, not only in scientific research but also in the
formulation of policies and the creation of international juridical
instruments.
In order to have an adequate picture, a fundamental
distinction must first be made. On the one hand, there are trends
emerging from the global Conferences organized by the UN which are
more "political" in nature but which nonetheless affect
the activity of the international bodies of the UN system. On the
other hand, there is the level of norms stated by Conventions which
are binding on States; these are often limited to individual
questions.
The Defense of Life at the International Conferences (Cairo
and Beijing) After the collapse of ideological opposition between
the blocs, it seemed possible, at the beginning of the nineties, to
develop a world consensus on the principal problems of humanity. A
series of global Conferences organized by the UN were held; these --
it is right to note -- helped to focus attention on the needs and
the prospects of humanity and to establish a more balanced
definition of development -- which is not only economic but
sustainable, human and social ("Place people at the center of
development and direct our economies to meet human needs more
effectively"[3]). As far as the defense of human life is
concerned, the cultural climate at the time was affected by two
factors: first, by apocalyptic forecasts of a population boom
exceeding the resources of the planet and, second, by a radical
feminist ideology calling for women to have complete control over
their own bodies, including any unborn children.
In this context, the International Conference on Population
and Development (Cairo, 5-13 September 1994) emphasized population
control rather than development and was under powerful pressure to
concentrate on "women's reproductive health".
Consequently, abortion was considered an aspect of demographic
policy and a health service ("reproductive health
service"). On the other hand, despite strong pressure, and
thanks also to the firm commitment of the Holy See Delegation, there
was a reaffirmation of the principle agreed upon in Mexico City in
1984, namely that abortion is never to be considered a means of
family planning [4], and there was no endorsement of a so-called
"right to abortion". These points were also upheld a year
later, at the Fourth World Conference on Women (Beijing, 4-15
September 1995), where the pressures earlier in Cairo reappeared
even more forcefully, leading to the insertion throughout the final
documents of language about which the Holy See had expressed serious
reserves in 1994. A balanced evaluation of these great international
meetings must nevertheless recognize that other conclusions -- like
those of the 1995 World Summit on Social Development in Copenhagen
or the 1996 World Food Summit in Rome -- proved decidedly closer to
the positions of the Holy See, especially with regard to social
issues. The tendencies present in Cairo and Beijing re-emerged when
the UN sought to evaluate, five years after the Conference, the
implementation of the Action Program adopted at Cairo. There a move
was made to introduce the novel and equivocal expression
"emergency contraception" as a pretext for medically
induced (by pills) early abortion. The Holy See, with the support of
Argentina, Nicaragua, and some other countries managed not to have
this expression approved[5]. The Holy See also denounced the
tendency to accept sexual relations outside of marriage, even for
adolescents, and to consider abortion as an aspect of demographic
policies and as a method of choice [6].
In view of the efforts being made in society to defend human
life, we may ask: what weight do the conclusions of these world
meetings have? We may point out that these are not texts which are
binding on States; rather, they establish, by consent, general
principles which merely serve as guidelines ("soft law").
These principles are meant to create or confirm tendencies which
will then influence the policy decisions of the individual
countries. Furthermore, these principles can become conditions for
multilateral or bilateral assistance to poor countries.
It must be made clear however that we are dealing with
tendencies which are not resolved on the basis of a single term or
an individual paragraph: although the expression emergency
contraception was not finally approved at "Cairo+5", at
the very same time the abortifacient pill RU486 was being
liberalized, under the name Mifegyne, in some European states.[7]
And this grave fact can be seen as related to the other statement of
the Action Program of the Cairo Conference, namely, that "in
circumstances where abortion is not prohibited by law, it should be
carried out safely" (No. 8.25). [8]
It should be noted that the reasons adduced in support of
these tendencies have gradually changed. In the beginning -- e.g.,
before and during the Cairo Conference -- an appeal was made to the
spectra of uncontrolled population increase, but this fear has been
proved unfounded: as demographic projections are being revised
downwards, the international documents are now linking the issues of
population growth and the "population aging". Lately a
so-called "human rights approach" has become more common:
all these issues are seen in terms of human rights. Often an appeal
is made to the freedom of individuals over their own body, that of
adolescents in particular.
Lines of Action of the Convention Committees and the
Agencies of the United Nations System The conclusions of the
international Conferences also have a second effect. They constitute
guidelines for the Convention Committees and directives for the
political activities of international agencies and bodies, those of
the United Nations system in particular, but others as well.[9]
Thus CEDAW, the Committee for the 1979 Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, which
affirms women's rights in matters of family planning [10], issued in
February 1999 a General Recommendation [11] calling for laws
condemning abortion as a crime to be amended by removing penalties
against women; [12] the Recommendation also states that a State is
bound to furnish reproductive health services even in cases where
health officials are conscientiously opposed to this.[13]
We can thus say that all the development efforts of the
United Nations now bear the stamp of Cairo and Beijing, and that the
operative principles of the action plans of those Conferences are
being proposed in counseling, in contracts of cooperation and in
various forms of assistance offered both to Governments and to
non-state institutions. We should not be surprised if they are
proposed, for example, to Catholic Universities, health centers or
Dioceses: in such cases, a careful evaluation is needed of the
responsibilities assumed and the impact of any such agreement with
an international agency within the local context.
At the level of general declarations, the World Health
Organization sought, at least until 1998, to accommodate opinions
opposed to the concepts of "reproductive health" and
"reproductive rights". This enabled the Holy See to make
its voice heard, with the result that, for example, the document
with which the WHO [14] accepted the conclusions of the Cairo
Conference avoided some of the more controversial points of that
Report. Furthermore, the Ethics Committee on human cloning and
medical research reached relatively acceptable conclusions.
Regarding concrete policies in the field of health care, it should
be noted that the World Health Organization assists States in
developing health programs within the context of a worldwide
consensus. Many programs are also financed by certain States and by
private foundations. Hence, alongside many perfectly acceptable
programs, there has also been the Human Reproduction Program, aimed
at developing the technology of contraception and medically induced
abortion.
It must however be pointed out that the present leadership
of the World Health Organization, which took over in 1998, has
adopted a much more decisive stance in favor of birth control and
reproductive health. Official declarations now reflect practical
tendencies, unfortunately in a sense unacceptable to the Holy See.
At the same time, a needed restructuring has led to the elimination
of sectors most at odds with the views of the new leadership (and
most sympathetic to those of "Evangelium Vitae"). Among
other things, plans to establish an ethics committee have been
postponed and perhaps even eliminated. Significant resources have
also been ser aside for research in the field of so-called
"reproductive health". [15]
Among other organizations, we may also mention UNICEF and
UNHCR as particularly significant. The former has for some time
launched contraceptive and sex education programs; as is known, the
Holy See has suspended its symbolic contribution to UNICEF in the
light of the latter's refusal to guarantee that this contribution
would not be used for programs contrary to Catholic principles.
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees provides
for the support of 22.3 million refugees, displaced persons and
returnees throughout the world. In November 1996, the UNHCR
announced that it was joining UNFPA in making available
"emergency reproductive health services" which include
"post-coital" or "emergency" contraception and
assistance for "incomplete abortions" in refugee camps
during the civil war in Rwanda. The International Federation of the
Red Cross and the Red Crescent Societies also agreed to follow this
project. The UNHCR also published the notorious Interagency Field
Manual, which emphasizes the sex education and "reproductive
services" to be provided to adolescents. A recent illustration
of these policies with regard to refugees was the sending of
"emergency reproductive health kits" for 350,000 people
announced by UNFPA during the recent Kosovo crisis.
As for relations between the international agencies
themselves, there is a growing movement away from forms of
partnership for cooperation on specific programs to types of
strategic alliances where the technical leadership of some
organizations tends to lose ground to powerful agencies which are
politically and economically present in the territory. UNAIDS, the
United Nations program to combat AIDS, is a case study of how this
kind of cooperation between the organizations and agencies of the
United Nations ends up depreciating the technical function of some
agencies and favoring various kinds of lobbies.
International
Directives Regarding the Themes of the Encyclical
We now pass to the normative juridical texts on the international
level which regulate the sensitive areas of the beginning, end and
transmission of life. While to this point we have been considering
trends, it is now time to examine specific areas, without neglecting
new issues as they arise.
The Right to Life
and Abortion [16]
It is important to begin by noting that international juridical
instruments solemnly proclaim a fundamental right to life.[17] It
must be pointed out however that, beginning with the first
discussions on the international level after the Second World War,
the numerous and pressing requests to define this right in terms of
a ban on abortion met resistance also from traditionally Protestant
countries. [18]
On the level of the juridical instruments of the United
Nations, the strongest affirmation of the right to life even of
unborn children is contained in the Declaration and the Convention
on the Rights of the Child. [19] Principle 4 of the Declaration,
repeated in the Preamble of the Convention, states that every child
needs "appropriate legal protection, before as well as after
birth". But this statement could only be made because it was
left to national legislation the determination of when a human being
begins to exist.
On the regional level, we can mention international
juridical instruments and policies concerning the unborn in Europe
and America. With regard to the Council of Europe and the European
Union, it is sadly taken for granted that access to abortion is an
acquired right, although legislation in certain countries (Malta and
Ireland) does not permit it. When international juridical
instruments which might touch on this theme are drawn up -- like the
Council of Europe's recent Convention on Human Rights and
Biomedicine -- terminology is used which will not interfere with the
legislation of individual nations, in order to enable a consensus.
It should be noted that in particular situations, as in the Kosovo
conflict, both the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
[20] and the European Parliament [21] adopted resolutions affirming
the right to abortion on the part of women who were raped.
The American Convention on Human Rights, [22] which went
into effect in 1978 and was ratified by 25 countries of North and
South America and the Caribbean (out of a total of 34 countries in
the region), is the only international convention on human rights
which grants juridical recognition to life from the moment of
conception,[23] and this commitment is clear to the member States.
[24] The Holy See has made frequent reference to this Convention in
its interventions before the Organization of American States and
other organizations of the so-called "inter-American
system". These interventions have consistently been well
received.
A specific question within the context of abortion is raised
by the problem of so-called "forced pregnancy". This
involves the particularly painful case in which a woman who was
raped for ethnic reasons is forced to bear the child against her
will. The term "forced pregnancy", which is per se
ambiguous,[25] appeared in the final documents of the Vienna
Conference with direct reference to situations of conflict; it was
then taken up again at the Cairo and Beijing Conferences. During the
attempts to establish the International Criminal Court at the Rome
Diplomatic Conference in the summer of 1998, some countries --
considering the continuance of ethnic rape in Bosnia-Herzegovina --
wanted to include an explicit reference to "forced
pregnancy" in the list of crimes against humanity. Since the
term could be interpreted as a justification of abortion, either in
situations of armed conflict or as a precedent for other situations,
the Holy See, after unsuccessfully attempting to have the term
deleted or replaced, asked that it be clearly defined. The crime was
thus given a foothold in international law, but with no reference to
a right to abortion. Despite some resistance, in the end t:he
delegates defined "forced pregnancy" as "the unlawful
confinement of a woman forcibly made pregnant, with the intent of
affecting the ethnic composition of any population or carrying out
other grave violations of international law. This definition shall
in no way be interpreted as affecting national laws relating to
pregnancy".
Experimentation
on Embryos [26]
Experimentation on human embryos is an issue which has encountered
such difficulties in international debate that no consensus has yet
been reached. On the world level, the UNESCO Universal Declaration
on the Human Genome and Human Rights, while dealing with matters of
genetic experimentation, is silent on the issue of experimentation
on the human genome, despite the observations put forth by the Holy
See together with other delegations. One difficulty arises from the
tendency begun by the "Warnock Report" and followed, among
others, by British legislation, which accepts experimentation on
embryos up to the fourteenth day. This means that the embryo is not
recognized as being fully human until the period of implantation is
completed. To obtain the agreement of the British, while on the
other hand sensing a need to protect the embryo, the negotiators of
the text of the Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine, which
the Council of Europe presented for signing at Oviedo in 1997,
deferred treatment of the issue to a future additional Protocol,
specifying in Article 18 of the Convention two points which, while
insufficient, have a certain value in principle: (1) whenever the
law permits research on embryos, such research must ensure that the
embryo is adequately protected; and (2) the creation of embryos for
research purposes is prohibited. It would be desirable for the
additional Protocol to call for full respect for the human embryo:
even if such a position would not receive widespread support, it
would represent a clear statement of principle in international law.
The Human Genome
and Cloning
In connection with experimentation on embryos, it seems appropriate
to mention two issues which taken on greater importance in recent
years: the use of the human genetic patrimony and human cloning.
With the growth and scientific progress made in the Genome
Project, prospects opened up for the possible appropriation and
economic exploitation of human genes as such. The then
Director-General of UNESCO, Federico Mayor Zaragoza, proposed a
juridical instrument which would establish principles in this
sensitive and as yet unexplored area. In January 1993 a process
began which led to the drafting, by the International Consultative
Committee for Biocthics, of the Universal Declaration on the Human
Genome and Human Rights. This was adopted by UNESCO on 12 November
1997 and then by the General Assembly of the United Nations on 9
December 1998. [27] The entire process of the drafting of this
document was carefully followed by the Holy See [28] which, in
addition to various other points, insisted above all on the need for
emphasis on the protection of each individual human being (rather
than the entire complex of humanity's genes), the prohibition of all
cloning of human beings, the inadequacy of the concept of
"heritage of humanity" with regard to genetic patrimony,
the need to defend the embryo, and control over the political,
economic and military interests which could influence genetic
research.
The Declaration as adopted, in addition to various
principles about the respect due to patients, proclaims in an
infelicitous formula that the human genome "is the heritage of
humanity" (even if "in a symbolic sense"), prohibits
using the human genome in its natural state for financial gains [29]
and states that the cloning of human beings -- unfortunately for
reproductive purposes only -- is contrary to human dignity and
should not be permitted. [30] This rejection of cloning, not
originally planned, was added towards the end of the drafting of the
text, following the well-known experiment of Dolly the sheep.
Whereas the UNESCO Declaration is, by nature, a statement of
principles (provisions have been made, however, for a process to
oversee its implementation in each country), the first binding
juridical instrument dealing with this latter issue was drafted by
the Council of Europe. On 12 January 1998, 19 countries [31] signed
in Paris an Additional Protocol to the European Convention of
Biomedicine on the Probibition of Cloning Human Beings. This
protocol, which also calls for serious criminal penalties, forbids
"any procedure aimed at creating a human being genetically
identical to another human being, living or dead", regardless
of the technique used, with no exceptions even for reasons of public
security, the prevention of criminal offences, the protection of
public health or the protection of the rights and liberties of third
persons.
Both in the case of the UNESCO Declaration and in that of
the Council of Europe Protocol, it must be pointed out that,
although the discussion took place at a time when the public opinion
was very much aware of the issue and in favor of the establishment
of precise norms, the only consensus that could be reached on the
international level (after considerable effort) was a ban on human
cloning for reproductive purposes, but not for other purposes, such
as research or therapy.
Questions about
the Patenting of Human Life
In April 1994, with the implementation of the Marrakesh Accord, the
World Trade Organization was established. From the point of view of
the defense of human life, its agreement on the protection of
intellectual property could prove important.[32] In compliance with
the agreement States must grant patents to pharmaceutical products
and biotechnological inventions. A State can nevertheless exclude
from its patenting provisions those inventions which it considers
inadmissable on moral grounds or for reasons of public order.[33] As
is known, a patent grants its holder a monopoly on the commercial
benefits of an invention for a period of twenty years. If a given
product or invention is not granted a patent, one may profit from it
but only in the context of free competition, in which anyone is free
to "copy" it. At the present time, biotechnological
research calls for an enormous financial outlay, which means that a
monopoly on commercial gain is a condition sine qua non for the
release of a product (since otherwise it would prove unprofitable).
Therefore, should a State deny a patent for some line of products,
the companies producing those products would not market them. This
norm seems important, especially given the products and procedures
related to the use of aborted fetuses and embryos, or from human
cloning.
Nevertheless, producers who are pressing to expand their
market will probably insist on obtaining patents, and so a change of
the norms is likely. Should this occur, the European Directive
98/44/CE of 6 July 1998 on the legal protection of biotechnological
inventions is important.[34] Strictly speaking, this Directive binds
only the Member Sates of the European Union; nevertheless it
provides a series of substantial definitions in the area of
patenting, with which the Member States of the World Trade
Organization OMC/WTO (162 countries) will have to bring their
present practice into compliance. The Directive will thus represent
a theoretical and legislative guide for other States and also for
future legal coordination within the various economic and commercial
blocs now being organized (MERCOSUR, APEC etc.).[35] The European
Directive lays down the principle that it is forbidden to patent the
human body and its parts, and embryonic human cells; it also forbids
the patenting of the human embryo, of methods of human cloning and
of procedures for modifying the foundational genetic identity of
human beings.[36] The patenting of the use of human embryos for
industrial and commercial purposes is also banned. This text of the
European Union is important because it fills a legislative gap; even
so, respect for those principles will also depend upon their legal
interpretation and the political will of the European nations in
future negotiations on the worldwide level.
The Death Penalty
As is known, positions concerning the death penalty have
traditionally been divided: while some States rightly consider the
abolition of the death penalty to be established principle of modern
legal thought, others consider it an effective deterrent measure.
When the Encyclical mentions "among the signs of hope" the
"growing public opposition to the death penalty",[37] and
affirms that "the problem must be viewed in the context of a
system of penal justice ever more in line with human dignity",
it can appeal to specific juridic facts. In the Council of Europe,
Protocol No. 6 to the European Convention on Human Rights,
Concerning the Death Penalty, of 28 April 1984, declared in its
first article that "The death penalty is abolished. No one can
be condemned to this penalty nor executed", while exceptions
are admitted only in time of war or in imminent danger of
conflict.[38] Within Europe, this tendency has gained momentum: in
October 1994 the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
adopted a Recommendation calling for the complete abolition of the
death penalty in all Member States, rejecting by a large majority an
amendment intended to preserve the right of States in cases of high
treason and espionage. A similar tendency also emerged within the
European Union: in March 1992, the European Parliament adopted a
resolution calling for the abolition of the death penalty in every
country of the world. The countries of the European Union are
committed to deny the extradition of accused persons subject to the
death penalty. Furthermore, the commitment to the abolition of the
death penalty throughout the world has set this as a condition for
negotiations with other countries.
The position adopted by Evangelium Vitae [39] has also drawn
attention on the international level. As is known, the Encyclical
states that it should never come to "the extreme of executing
the offender except in cases of absolute necessity, when it would
not be possible otherwise to defend society". It likewise
points out that "today however, as a result of steady
improvements in the organization of the penal system, such cases are
very rare, if not practically non-existent".[40]
In June following the Encyclical's publication, the European
Parliament asked the United States to abandon the application of the
death penalty. In May 1999, the Strasbourg Parliament again
requested that the issue of a universal moratorium on executions be
included in the next General Assembly of the United Nations.
The reaction at the level of the United Nations appears
significant. In May 1996 -- little more than a year after the
Encyclical's publication -- the Fifth Session of the U.N. Commission
for Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice [41] discussed the issue,
and the Report of the Secretary General devoted an entire section
[42] to the position taken by Pope John Paul II in Evangelium Vitae.
In the Working Group on the issue (the Third), Austria, together
with Germany and Italy, presented a draft resolution [43] which met
with opposition from Islamic countries, which considered it a matter
of divine law, and from other countries such as Tunisia and Japan.
As a final compromise, the resolution, as adopted, "takes note
with appreciation of the continuing process towards worldwide
abolition of the death penalty". On the other hand, the
proposal of a moratorium on capital punishment, presented to the
General Assembly in November 1999, was postponed in the face of
stroog opposition from many countries.
It is important to point out that the International Courts
for Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia have not made provisions for
the death penalty. This is especially significant in the case of
Rwanda: in that African country the accused are subject to the death
penalty, but not if they are found guilty by the International
Tribunal. The Diplomatic Conference of Rome, which established the
International Criminal Court, did not provide for capital punishment
in its list of penalties.
Euthanasia
The debate concerning "easy death", carried on at times
with definitions poorly adapted to the scientific facts and the
ethical issues involved, had begun before the publication of
Evangelium Vitae. It can be pointed out that on the international
level -- hitherto the debate has been limited to European
institutions -- whenever it has been a question of voting for
juridical instruments, the defense of life has thus far prevailed.
In the European Parliament, as early as 1991 a Resolution on
assistance to the dying which actually permitted euthanasia and had
received the approval of the Commission for Environment, Health and
Consumer Protection, was not presented to the plenary assembly, due
in part to the intervention of the European Bishops and Parliament
members sensitive to the Catholic position. In 1996,[44] the
Parliament adopted a Resolution concerning attacks on the right to
life of the handicapped. The Resolution forcefully rejects the claim
that minors, patients in a state of unarousable awareness
("coma vigile") and the newborn do not have an
unrestricted right to life, it affirms that the right to life is
granted to every human being regardless of health, gender, race and
age; and it rejects active euthanasia with regard to patients in a
state of unarousable awareness ("coma vigile") and newborn
children with handicaps.[45]
In June 1999, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of
Europe approved a Recommendation favoring the continuation of an
unconditional ban on the deliberate ending of the life of the
terminally ill or the dying. All the Member States are asked to
adopt whatever legislative measures are necessary to ensure the
legal and social protection of the terminally ill; everyone must be
guaranteed palliative care even at home and the availability of
analgesics, even when these, as a secondary effect, might aggravate
the patient's condition. The adoption of this stance therefore
rejected the argument of a "right to die" put forward by
many organizations; it may reopen debate in the Netherlands and
Switzerland, where euthanasia is practiced under strict controls,
and it may influence other countries like Belgium and Luxemburg,
where legislative proposals in this regard have recently been
presented.
Conclusion
At the present time, international policies and norms on human life
present a checkered and uneven picture, combining decisions made at
different times and reflecting different concerns, and one still in
a state of flux. Yet if we wish to grasp their "logic", so
to speak, we may observe that:
a) the life of persons already born is well protected, even
vis-a-vis the interests of scientific research and, at least
hitherto, of the individual's own will: the idea of euthanasia is
not accepted. In this regard, one can point to a non-acceptance, at
least on the worldwide level, of the death penalty;
b) whenever there is a conflict between the interest of a
person already born and the life of an unborn human being (a fetus
or embryo), the latter is sacrificed (e.g., by abortion, assisted
procreation, the use of surplus embryos and even cloning for
therapeutic purposes);
c) the interests of scientific research tend to prevail over
respect for unborn life;
d) some fixed limits have been set: the rejection of cloning
for reproductive purposes and, in Europe, the rejection of the
production of embryos for research purposes.
In this overall picture, which emerges from a framework of
legal positivism, it is not difficult to see inconsistencies and
substantial contradictions. With a view to activity in favor of
life, I would consider it helpful to keep in mind that these
international policies are in effect the reflection and the result
of ways of thinking -- which might be called hedonistic or
neo-Malthusian -- which are widespread in the developed countries
and associated with real or alleged economic and political
interests. The political consensus forged at a World Conference or
the application of a Convention can have a significant influence on
the national level, yet they themselves are conditioned by public
opinion, which can be influenced by what is being done from below.
On the other hand, the international juridical instruments, for all
their limitations, do contain principles to which citizens can
appeal-in demanding from States a greater protection of human life.
In addition, there seems to be ample room for activity "from
below", inspired by charity. Much can be done to defend life
and to create a sense of hope within the broader public before the
issue reaches the level of international debate. Activity can take
place on many levels, from the national down to the local: by
careful attention to the granting of patents, by practical acts of
solidarity with mothers struggling to accept an unborn child, by
insistence upon the right to conscientious objection without
discrimination for health-care workers, and by commitment to
scientific research which will respect life.
NOTES
[1] Hereafter cited as EV.
[2] 2EV 11.
[3] Copenhagen Declaration on Social Development
(12.03.1995), No. 26a.
[4] "In no case should abortion be promoted as a means
of family planning" (ICDP Platform 8.25).
[5] This would have in effect overridden the prohibition of
abortion as a method of family planning sanctioned at Cairo.
[6] See the Statement of interpretation by Archbishop Renato
R. Martino at the Special Session of the U.N. General Assembly (30
June - 2 July 1999), in "L'Osservatore Romano," 5- 6 July
1999, p. 2.
[7] The pill, marketed in France, Great Britain and Sweden,
was authorized on 6 July 1999 in Germany and the following day
received the "go-ahead" of the Belgian medical
authorities; the manufacturer expects that approval will soon be
given in Austria, Denmark, Spain, Finland and the Netherlands.
[8] In the French text: "Dans le cas où il n'est pas
interdit par la loi, l'avortement devrait être pratiqué dans de
bonnes conditions de sécurité".
[9] The international bodies most affected are, in the U.N.
system, UNICEF, UNFPA, WHO, UNDP and the U.N. Economic Commissions
ECA, ECLAC and ESCAP. In particular, UNFPA, together with the IPPF
(International Planned Parenthood Federation), has programs in 157
countries lobbying to change laws and to implement programs of birth
control, with reserves of 335 million US dollars. Among those bodies
not belonging to the U.N. system, the World Bank, Regional Banks for
development and the OECD can be mentioned.
[10] Convention cited above, art. 12 and 14.
[11] Relative to Art. 12 of the Convention.
[12] "When possible, legislation criminalizing abortion
could be amended to remove punitive provisions imposed on women who
undergo abortion": Implementation of Art. 21 of the
Convention... General Recommendation on Article 12: Women and Health
(1 February 1999), No. 31c, p. 14.
[13] ''It is discriminatory for a State party to refuse to
legally provide for the performance of certain reproductive health
services for women. For instance, if health service providers refuse
to perform such services based on conscientious objection, measures
should be introduced to ensure that women are referred to
alternative health providers" (Ibidem, No. 11, p. 5).
[14] Cf. Resolution of the WHO Assembly WHA 48.10, dated 12
May 1995.
[15] In the Program Budget 2000-2001, the "Health
systems and community health program" saw a 20.37% increase of
its budget. It will be in a position to draw on US$145,022,000, the
largest amount after that set aside for communicable diseases. Of
this amount, $21,622,000 comes from the ordinary budget, while
$123,400,000 comes from other funds. One notes that $64,561,000
(about 50%) will be set aside for reproductive health and research.
The other areas of the program which will receive financing are
health systems, the health and development of children and
adolescents, women's health. The indication is clear: to increase
and spread ideas, initiatives, programs on reproductive health from
a secular viewpoint with all the moral consequences relating to
sexuality and the family.
[16] Cf. EV 13, 17, 58-60.
[17] Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 3:
"Everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of
person"; International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,
Article 6.1: "Every human being has the inherent right to life.
This right shall be protected by law. No one shall be arbitrarily
deprived of his life."
[18] Great Britain and Denmark in particular.
[19] "Whereas the child, by reason of his physical and
mental immaturity, needs special safeguards and care, including
appropriate legal protection, before as well as after birth"
(Preamble of the Declaration of the Rights of the Child, proclaimed
by General Assembly Resolution 1386 - XIV - of 20 November 1959);
"... He shall be entitled to grow and develop in health; to
this end, special care and protection shall be provided both to him
and his mother, including adequate pro-natal and post-natal
care" (ibid., Principle 4). Twenty years later, in the
Convention, Principle 4 of the Declaration was repeated in the
Preamble, and in article 6 it was recognized that "every child
has the inherent right to life"; but in article 1 the following
definition was formulated: "a child means every human being
below the age of eighteen years", mentioning the "terminus
ad quem," but not indicating precisely the beginning and
leaving the interpretation of the term "human being" to
national legislation, for the precise purpose of making the text
acceptable for those countries opposed to an international
prohibition of abortion.
[20] Second part, April 1999.
[21] March 1999 Session.
[22] Pacto de San José de Costa Rica, dated 22 November
1969; it went into effect on 18 July 1978.
[23] Article 4 § 1: "Toda persona tiene derecho a que
se respete su vida. Este derecho estará protegido por la ley y, en
general, a partir del momento de la concepción. Nadie puede ser
privado de la vida arbitrariamente."
[24] This is one of the reasons why the United States of
America did not ratify the Convention. Argentina, in the
constitutional reform of 22 August 1994, in Article 22, granted
constitutional status to the Declarations of Rights of the American
Convention, as well as to those of the two Covenants on Human Rights
of the United Nations. In 1998, San Salvador also incorporated into
its Constitution the provisions of the American Convention.
[25] Since it is difficult to view the birth of an innocent
human being as a crime; instead we have here a combination of crimes
to which heavy penalties have already been attached: sexual
violence, unlawful confinement, etc.
[26] Cf. EV 63.
[27] 85th Plenary Session, Resolution 53/152 of 9 December
1998.
[28] In addition to the French Episcopal Conference, which
published an interesting and timely position paper.
[29] Cf. Article 4.
[30] Cf. Article 11: "Practices which are contrary to
human dignitv. such as reproductive cloning of human beings, shall
not be permitted".
[31] Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Greece, Iceland,
Italy, Latvia, Luxembourg, the Former Yugoslav Republic of
Macedonia, Moldavia, Norway, Portugal, Romania, San Marino,
Slovenia, Spain, Sweden and Turkey. The Protocol will go into effect
when at least five of the signatory countries have ratified it. It
has been presented for signing to the 41 Member States of the
Council of Europe and to others which took part in its drafting,
such as Australia, Canada, Japan, the Holy See and the United
States.
[32] The reference here is to the ADPIC/TRIP Accord (Aspects
des droits de propriété‚ intellectuelle qui touchent au commerce
/ Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights), which
establishes a common provision for the protection of intellectual
property.
[33] Accord de Marrakech instituant l'Organisation Mondiale
du Commerce (Marrakesh, 15 April 1994) - Annexe 1c: Accord sur les
aspects des droits de propriété intellectuelle qui tonchent au
commerce (ADPIC), Articles 27 and 73.
[34] Directive 98/44/CE of the European Parliament and of
the Council, dated 6 July 1998, on the Legal Protection of
Biotechnological Inventions, in the official gazette of the European
Community, Series L, No. 213, 30 July 1998, p. 13. The Member States
of the European Union must bring their respective national norms
into line with the Directive before 30 July 2000.
[35] This would be an example of how action on the regional
level can have a positive influence on the universal level.
[36] Directive 98/44/CE, Article 6, 52.
[37] EV 27.
[38] Protocol No. 6, art. 2; States must report to the
Secretary General of the Council of Europe about their respective
legislation. Countries which have joined the Council subsequently
are requested to adjust their legislation by abolishing the death
penalty (in 1995 the Ukraine stated that it would respect a
moratorium on executions in view of the abolition of the death
penalty within three years).
[39]Cf. EV 27,55-56.
[40] EV 56.
[41] Vienna, 21-31 May 1996.
[42] Doc. E/CN.15/1996/19, N.42, p.11.
[43] Doc. E/CN.15/1996/L.17.
[44] Session of 20-24 May 1996.
[45] It should be noted, however, that no reference is made
to the life of unborn children
(Original text)
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