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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Europe court denies fetus full human rights

Constant Brand Associated Press

BRUSSELS, Belgium — Europe’s top human rights court rejected an appeal Thursday to grant full human rights to a fetus, saying national governments must decide the issue themselves.

Meeting in Strasbourg, France, the European Court of Human Rights said it could not rule on a case filed by a French woman who was forced to have an abortion after a doctor’s mistake.

Thi-Nho Vo had argued that France had violated the right to life of her unborn child, after French courts refused to convict the doctor of involuntary homicide.

The 17-judge panel ruled the issue of when the right to life begins “was a question to be decided at national level … because the issue had not been decided within the majority of states” which have ratified the European Convention on human rights.

The court said at the European level, “there was no consensus on the nature and a status of the embryo and/or fetus.”

Vo took the case to the European court after France’s highest court overturned the doctor’s conviction on a charge of involuntary homicide, ruling the fetus was not yet a human being entitled to the protection of criminal law.

In a 14-2 decision, the European Court concluded that “it was neither desirable, nor even possible … to answer in the abstract the question whether the unborn child was a person.” The presiding judge did not cast a vote.

The court’s sensitive approach reflected deep differences over abortion across the continent.

The decision was welcomed by a leading abortion rights group that filed arguments warning that accepting a right to life for a fetus could make abortions illegal in all 45 countries that recognize the court’s jurisdiction.

“This was obviously a tragic individual case but we are pleased that the judges have ruled to reject the applicant’s case,” said Anne Weyman, chief executive of the London-based Family Planning Association.

In a statement, she said the “decision will safeguard the laws on abortion which have been widely adopted in the European member states, and will serve to protect women’s rights to life, health, self-determination and equality.”