Family & Life

  • Home
  • About Family & Life
  • News Centre
    • Irish News
    • International News
    • Population News
  • Donate Now
  • Events
  • Blog
  • LifeZine
  • Just For Schools
  • Pregnancy Support
  • Campaigns
  • Resource Centre
  • Book Store
  • Useful Links
  • Search
  • Jobs at Family & Life
Irish News International News Population News
Bio-Ethics Economics Family Issues Health Politics Population Issues Pro-Life
Pro-Life
Pro-Life Archive

Send this news story to a friend

UN Committee Calls for Easier Access to Abortion in Ireland : 14th Aug 08


UN Committee Calls for Easier Access to Abortion in Ireland

The UN Human Rights Committee has once again chided Ireland for not allowing abortion on demand. The UN Committee wants a more detailed response from Ireland on how UN covenant rights are protected. "Much done, more to do" describes the UN Human Rights Committee's observations on Ireland's human rights record. In the 19 years since Ireland signed up to the UN Covenant on Civil and Political Rights much progress has been made, as the UN committee charged with overseeing it acknowledges in its third progress report on Ireland. It identifies about 19 areas where compliance should be improved.

The committee reiterated its concern regarding the circumstances under which women can lawfully have an abortion in the State. While noting the establishment of the Crisis Pregnancy Agency, the committee regrets that the progress in this regard is slow. However, the UN was highly criticised for taking Ireland to task on human rights. The Irish Times. July 25.

However Irish Independent columnist David Quinn was highly critical of the UN’s stance.

‘How dare the UN take us to task on human rights’

According to ‘Irish Independent’ columnist David Quinn, “When the Catholic Church was still the major power in the land, what incensed many of its critics was its claim to have a monopoly on morality.

Today, the shoe is firmly on the other foot and it is the (mainly) anti-religious left that claims the monopoly, except that they don't call it morality anymore, they call it "human rights".

Just this week, Ireland was before the UN Human Rights Committee. It appears before this unaccountable and unelected body every five years to explain its "progress" in implementing certain rights. The Government was represented by Paul Gallagher, the Attorney General. It was bad enough that Ireland was being judged by a supra-national body like the UN at all, but what made things much worse is that our record was being judged by representatives from countries that are serial human rights abusers, such as Egypt.

An entire global industry has been built up around human rights. Ironically, this industry is a sort of secular Catholic Church, with its version of the local bishops' conferences in the shape of outfits like the Equality Authority, the Human Rights Commission and the Irish Council for Civil Liberties, and its equivalent of the Vatican in the shape of the UN.

It is the job of these secular clergy to try and corral politicians into enshrining international human rights conventions -- drafted at the UN, or the EU, or the Council of Europe -- into national law and to have them enforced by the courts. They do this as assiduously as the Irish bishops once sought to have Catholic moral teachings enshrined in Irish law.

What is happening is fantastically undemocratic and it involves a massive transfer of power from national legislatures to supra-national bodies, local and international courts and local and international human rights quangos and NGOs.

This is happening without ordinary people even noticing; or else, when they do notice, they shrug their shoulders, because who could possibly be against "human rights"?

Who indeed? But, equally, who could be against morality, until you discover that what is being foisted upon you is Catholic morality, or Victorian morality, or Communist morality, or Nazi morality, or socialist morality or secular humanist morality, or whatever type of morality it is that you happen to be against.

Just as there are different and competing views of morality, there are different and competing views of human rights and these are often radically at odds with one another. For example, I might believe in the right to life of the unborn and you might believe in the right to an abortion. The big problem today is that the human rights industry is almost entirely in the grip of the left and a mainly secular and left-wing interpretation is being forced on the concept of human rights, and then on country after country via the aforementioned international conventions, courts, quangos and NGOs.

For a classic left-wing interpretation of human rights, look no further than the document the Irish Council for Civil Liberties sent out to that UN Committee which our unfortunate Attorney General had to appear before this week.

It favours abortion rights, as distinct from the right of life of the unborn. It favours same-sex marriage and gay adoption, as distinct from the right of a child to a mother and father.

With regard to freedom of thought, conscience and religion, it is much more concerned about freedom from religion than freedom of religion. All of the rest of the document might as well have been dreamt up by the old democratic left.

In short, the human rights industry is the means by which the left intends foisting its agenda on us without having to go to the bother of persuading voters.

"Human rights" has now become a synonym for socialism -- or, at best, social democracy -- and the left hopes the rest of us don't spot how they have co-opted human rights and lashed it to their own agenda.

But if you do care about freedom of expression, then you should be deeply worried, because the human rights industry has it in its sights, just as it has so many of our other freedoms, including democracy itself, in its sights. The time to protest is now. The Irish Independent. July 18.

Send this news story to a friend

Recent Topics

  • Medicines Board Exposes Irish Fertility Industry Fiascos That Trigger Embryo...
  • Aborted Mums Need Mental Health Care, Leading Irish Psychiatrist Says
  • 14-Year-Olds to Learn about Their “Right” to an Abortion
  • Sky’s Suicide Broadcast “Indefensible”
  • Vatican Raps Italy’s Abortion-Pill Plan; More Doctors Refuse to Kill
  • More Adult Stem-Cell Progress: Brain Cells “Could Restore Hearing”
  • Why the Right to Life is Precious—Tales from an Irish Gran
  • Profit Motivates Embryo Stem-Cell Research, Irish Bishop Alleges
  • UK Bishops Hail Promising New Adult Stem-Cell Treatments
  • Vatican Warns Against Moral Pitfalls of Biotechnology
  • UN Rights Declaration Inspires a Country to Promote the Family
Family & Life,
26 Mountjoy Square,
Dublin 1,
Ireland.
Tel. +353 (0) 1 855 2790
Fax. +353 (0) 1 855 2474
e-mail: fandl@iol.ie