Tens of thousands in Poland rally to condemn abortion law after woman’s death

Tens of thousands have gathered in cities across Poland to protest strict abortion laws after a pregnant woman's death reignited public debate on the issue in one of Europe's most devoutly Catholic countries.

Demonstrators protest against Poland's restrictive abortions laws outside Poland's Constitutional Tribunal in Warsaw, 6 November 2021.

The protesters held portraits of the woman, 30-year-old Iza, who died in hospital from septic shock in her 22nd week of pregnancy. Source: AP

Tens of thousands of people have demonstrated in Warsaw and dozens of other Polish cities to denounce a nine-month-old abortion law blamed for claiming the life of a pregnant mother, organisers said.

The 30-year-old woman died of septicaemia in a Polish hospital after her 22-week-old foetus died in her womb, according to the family's lawyer Jolanta Budzowska.

She was, she added, the first victim of the near-total ban on abortion - even in cases of foetal defects.



Izabela, married for 10 years and a mother of a nine-year-old child, agonisingly described her worsening condition in text messages made public since her death in late September.

"Not one more," shouted thousands of demonstrators in the capital Warsaw who protested outside the Constitutional Court and the health ministry.

"I am here to make sure that no woman's life is put at risk any more," Ewa Pietrzyk, a 40-year-old Warsaw resident, told the AFP news agency as she held a photo of Izabela.

"The current legislation is killing women."
People take part in a protest under the slogan 'Not one more' in Warsaw, Poland, 6 November 2021.
Poland's new abortion law, which bans terminations in cases of foetal defects, has sparked protests all over the country. Source: AAP
Women's rights groups said they organised similar demonstrations in around 70 other Polish towns and cities, where banners read 'Her heart was beating too'.

Izabela's family issued a statement saying doctors at the hospital in the southern town of Pszczyna "took a wait-and-see attitude," which it attributed to "the rules in effect limiting the possibility of a legal abortion".

The pregnant mother recalled the limbo she was in with a baby she said weighed 485 grams, according to text messages that were made public.

"For now, thanks to the law on abortion, I must remain lying down," she said.

'It's dreadful'

"And there's nothing they can do. They will wait until (the baby) dies or until something starts, and if not, I can, great, expect septicaemia," Izabela wrote in a text to her mother.

"My fever is increasing. I hope that I don't have septicaemia, otherwise I will not make it," the pregnant mother said.

"It's dreadful. And I have to wait," she said.
According to the nationalist government running the country, the woman's death had nothing to do with the new law.

Two doctors at the hospital in Pszczyna were suspended after Izabela's death, and the town's prosecutors have launched an inquiry.

Poland's Constitutional Court last year sided with the Catholic country's populist right-wing government to rule that terminations over foetal defects were unconstitutional.

This resulted in a further tightening of already heavy restrictions on abortions, which came into effect in late January.
Rights group say that several thousand women have sought their help to seek abortions, more often that not abroad.

In October, a coalition of 14 rights groups including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch said that as a result of the court ruling "women, girls, and all pregnant people have faced extreme barriers to accessing legal abortions".

The NGOs called on the European Commission to immediately implement a mechanism that could see Poland denied funds from Brussels for not respecting "EU values".

The Constitutional Court, which the EU says has had its independence stripped away, is currently at the centre of a separate row with Brussels after a controversial ruling earlier this month against the supremacy of the bloc's laws.

With Reuters.


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3 min read
Published 7 November 2021 8:53am
Updated 7 November 2021 9:01am
Source: AFP, SBS


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