Latest Women News

Germany Ends Ban on Abortion Advertisement

0 126

BERLIN — Lawmakers voted on Friday to end a Nazi-era ban on the advertisement of abortion services, a measure that had effectively criminalized doctors who provided information about the procedure.

Despite being ignored for many years, the law had recently been used to bring about several high-profile legal cases against doctors. That, in turn, led to a sustained campaign by abortion-rights activists for repeal of the advertising ban, which Germany’s relatively new government had made a goal.

After a mandatory consultation session with the German Consulate, abortion is legal in Germany until the 12th weeks of pregnancy.

“This is our day,” wrote Nora Szász, a gynecologist in the central city of Kassel, in a Tweet. Referring to the law by its criminal code number, she added: “The #219a falls and with it a piece of the worst patronization of women.”

With the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday overturning Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court decision that had legalized abortion, the German lawmakers’ decision reflected a broad counterpoint on the issue.

“By abolishing Section 219a of the Criminal Code, we are strengthening the self-determination and safety of all women,” said Nancy Faeser, the country’s interior minister.

The vote was cast by a show-of-hands in German Parliament. It was carried by the coalition government’s three parties and the far left party.

Germany’s conservative Christian Democratic Union, which ran the previous four governments under Angela Merkel, had blocked previous efforts to purge the law from the books and voted against the repeal on Friday.

“We don’t want public advertising of abortions on the internet or social media,” Elisabeth Winkelmeier-Becker, a Christian Democratic member of Parliament, said before the vote.

Other lawmakers also opposed the repeal. “A woman’s right to sexual self-determination also includes taking responsibility for ensuring that she does not become pregnant if she does not want to,” Thomas Seitz of the far-right Alternative for Germany party, said in Parliament on Friday.

But the new government, led by Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s Social Democrats, had promised a repeal of the ban in its coalition agreement, a sort of political road map that it had presented last November.

“Today is a tremendous day,” Lisa Paus, the federal minister for families, seniors women and youth, told lawmakers before the vote. “For the physicians and above all for all women in this country.”

Germany’s action also highlights the ideological split on the issue within the Europe Union. In neighboring Poland, whose border is just an hour’s drive from Berlin, all abortions are banned.

However, while Belgium and the Netherlands have mandatory waiting periods, and France requires that women seeking abortions go through two consultations with a doctor, France has not banned the transmission information about the procedure in the same way as Germany.

“The fact that we prohibit highly qualified doctors who perform such procedures from providing factual information under criminal penalty is absurd, it is out of touch with the times, it is unjust and that is why we are ending this state of affairs,” Marco Buschmann, the justice minister, told lawmakers during the session.

The law, which dates to the Nazi era and was quietly ignored by doctors for decades, became relevant again with the rising popularity of the internet as a medical resource — raising the question of what is advertising and what is simply information — and an increase in criminal complaints from anti-abortion activists.

In 2017, Dr. Kristina Hänel, a general practitioner who offers abortions in the central town of Giessen, posted information on the procedure on her website. Judge fined her 6,000 euro for advertising the procedure. Instead of removing the content, she took the decision to a higher court and eventually all the way to the country’s highest court, the Constitutional Court in Karlsruhe.

And while the court upheld the law then, and she was forced to pay a reduced fine, her case brought the issue of abortion advertising into public consciousness, and Dr. Hänel became one of the country’s best known abortion-rights activists.

The law was slightly amended three years ago to allow doctors to state whether they offer abortions. However, the ban on advertising remained in effect. Judges continued to hand down penalties, including in a 2019 ruling against a two gynecologists in Berlin who were fined 2,000 euros for writing on their site that they offered the procedure in a “protected atmosphere” and that it was “anesthesia-free” and “drug-induced.”

The ban on advertising had made finding an abortion provider very difficult, Dr. Hänel said. “Women sometimes have to call 10 doctors — where they are often treated badly — before they stumble onto someone who can provide them information.”

“Its such a relief after five years of grueling battles,” Dr. Hänel said about Friday’s vote, which she traveled the 300 miles to Berlin to witness. “I can now simply put my information back on the website so that the women who come to us can be simply be informed.”



Source: NY Times

Join the Newsletter
Join the Newsletter
Sign up here to get the latest news delivered directly to your inbox.
You can unsubscribe at any time
Leave a comment

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Accept Read More

Privacy & Cookies Policy