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Outrage as disabled girl, 14, raped by her uncle is refused abortion in Poland

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Outrage as disabled girl, 14, raped by her uncle is refused abortion in Poland
Outrage as disabled girl, 14, raped by her uncle is refused abortion in Poland

A MENTALLY disabled 14-year-old girl who was raped by her own uncle has been refused an abortion in her native Poland, sparking outrage.

The teenager was turned away from two different hospitals in Poland, where doctors are legally allowed to refuse to perform an abortion on ethical grounds.

A mentally disabled girl, 14, has been refused an abortion in Poland [FILE] eiqrdirziddrprw
A mentally disabled girl, 14, has been refused an abortion in Poland [FILE]Credit: Getty
The country has some of the strictest abortion laws in Europe
The country has some of the strictest abortion laws in EuropeCredit: Getty
More than 90% of people in Poland are Catholic
More than 90% of people in Poland are CatholicCredit: Getty - Contributor

Polish lawmakers in the deeply Catholic country in 2020 signed into law some of the strictest abortion laws in Europe.

Termination of pregnancy is only legal in the country when the pregnancy is the result of a criminal act such as rape or incest, or where going ahead with the pregnancy puts the health of the woman at risk.

But even though the underage girl was clearly the victim of sexual abuse, she was refused treatment at two different hospitals in her home region of Podlasie in the northeast of the country.

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Staff refused to even tell her where she could receive a legal abortion, which violates Poland's laws.

While doctors in Poland are allowed to refuse to perform an abortion under a so-called "conscience clause", hospitals are required to inform patients where they can obtain a legal termination.

The girl, who did not understand that she was pregnant, was treated "brutally and inhumanely" by doctors, according to her aunt who brought her to hospital.

A prosecutor had even provided documents saying an alleged rape had taken place and an abortion would be legal, but the pair were still turned away by doctors.

Hospital staff reportedly told them: "Not here, go away. We don't know where. It's none of our concern."

The aunt then approached reproductive organisation Federa who helped to take the young girl to the Polish capital Warsaw, where a safe and successful abortion was performed.

But even in devoutly-Catholic Poland, the initial refusal of doctors to treat a mentally-disabled underage girl has sparked disgust.

In a statement, Federa said: "Warsaw doctors couldn't understand the conduct of the doctors from Podlasie. No empathy is an understatement.

"We have no words of indignation at such treatment."

Health ministry spokesman Wojciech Andrusiewicz confirmed that local hospitals failed to comply with the law and said a probe has been launched.

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He told TVN: "Such an abortion should either be carried out or they should indicate a place where such an abortion can be carried out, so the hospital acted against the statuary provisions."

We have no words of indignation at such treatment

FederaPolish reproductive organisation

Gynaecologist and member of Poland's Supreme Medical Chamber Dr Artur Plachta told the publication Fakty: "I am ashamed of them because they did not help the child.

"This child suffered two dramas, she was raped by someone, even the closest person, and now she received a third 'gift' from her medical colleagues, she was not helped."

Since 2015, Poland has been ruled by the right-wing nationalistic Law and Justice party, which swept to power on a promise to defend what it sees as the country's Catholic traditions.

More than 90 per cent of Polish people are Catholic, but the strengthening of abortion laws in 2020 triggered mass protests.

Some 100,000 demonstrators took to the streets, following new rules which even banned abortions for malformed foetuses.

A result of the strengthening of the law has been that doctors are now often reluctant to perform abortions even if they want to, due to fear of legal consequences.

Donald Tusk, former President of the European Parliament and now leader of Poland's largest opposition party called the case another example of the environment created by the new law.

He said that it often leaves women's pregnancies to be "led by prosecutors or ruling party politicians".

Tusk pointed to an infamous case from 2021 in which a pregnant woman died from septic shock.

Doctors refused to perform an abortion and instead waited for her foetus, which had been diagnosed with severe birth defects, to die first.

Opposition politicians have called for changes to the abortion law, and removing the "conscience clause".

Left-wing MP Katarzyna Kotula from the opposition Lewica party said in a statement: "The conscience clause is a barbaric and inhumane law repeatedly exploited by doctors. It should be abolished."

The 2020 law change sparked mass protests in Poland
The 2020 law change sparked mass protests in PolandCredit: Getty

Anthony Blair

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