• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

France Upholds 'Right Not to be Born'

Amused

Elite Member
France upholds 'right not to be born'


France's highest court of appeal has ruled that disabled children are entitled to compensation if their mothers were not given the chance of an abortion.

The ruling follows a case brought by three families with physically deformed children, who argued that if doctors had detected the foetuses' disabilities they would have had the pregnancies terminated.

Doctors and campaigners for the disabled have reacted furiously, describing the decision by the Cour de Cassation as an incitement to eugenics.

The ruling was a surprise because it upheld a widely condemned landmark decision - known as the Perruche case - which awarded a mentally retarded boy damages last year because he had not been aborted.

The case was widely described as establishing in law a disabled child's "right not to be born."

Judges at the Cour de Cassation decided that the Perruche precedent remained "as long as a causal link can be established with an error committed by a doctor".

Furious reaction

The Collective To Stop Discrimination against the Disabled (CCH), which was set up after the Perruche case, responded angrily.

"This is a real act of phobia. Now parents are going to be attacked and seen as irresponsible because they gave birth to a handicapped child," it said.

Doctors say the fear of being sued for a mis-diagnosis would encourage them to recommend abortions at the smallest hint of a disability.

The court was ruling on a case brought by the families of three children aged between nine and 11. One has a malformation of the spine and the other two have only one arm.

"The ruling means that the handicapped have no place in our society," said Yves Richard, a lawyer representing the medical profession.

"There is a real risk of this starting a process that ends with the search for the perfect child."

http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/europe/newsid_1437000/1437335.stm
 


<< So what's your opinion on that AmusedOne? >>



Well, I wanted to see everyone else's opinion.... But the story did leave me shaking my head and saying &quot;only in France...&quot; Then I realized it's only a matter of time before US lawyers jump on this.
 
I think parents have every right to know if their unborn child is disabled or not so they can have an abortion if they choose to. But paying these children money if the doctor did not tell the parents is stupid. its like saying &quot;It was either this or you never being born, here take some money!&quot;
 
They need to go to the Netherlnads where euthanasia is legal. And europe wonders why its population is declining.

How could you prove the mother &quot;was not given the chance of an abortion?&quot; That's going to be a tough argument to make now that the abortion pill is available to any woman who wants it.
 
That's going to be a tough argument to make now that the abortion pill is available to any woman who wants it.

Wow, I hadn't even thought about that - good point.
 
Well, correct me if I'm wrong, but shouldn't the abortion pill be taken in the early days of pregnancy? If the woman wanted a child, she wouldn't have taken the pill early on. Only in the later stages of pregnancy can a mother find out the physical/mental condition of her soon-to-be-born.
 
Back
Top