Portugal church says mutation sparked abortion loss

By Staff
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Google Oneindia News

LISBON, Feb 17 (Reuters) Portugal's Catholic church blamed ''cultural mutation'' for the large number of people who voted to legalise abortion in a referendum and urged doctors to refuse to carry out the operation if asked.

Portugal held a referendum on abortion on Sunday in which 59.3 per cent voted to lift an abortion ban and 40.8 per cent voted against. Even though less than half the electorate voted, making the referendum non-binding, Prime Minister Jose Socrates said yesterday he would legalise abortion in parliament.

The Catholic church led the campaign to maintain the ban, which liberals say has no place in modern Europe, where only Poland, Ireland and Malta still prohibit abortions.

''The favourable result for the 'yes' is a sign of accentuated cultural mutation by the Portuguese people, which we have to confront with realism,'' the national conference of bishops said in its first statement since the referendum.

It said this was caused by ''the globalisation of ways of thinking and opinions by the media'' and urged doctors and nurses to refuse to operate if women want abortions.

''We appeal to doctors and health professionals not to hesitate in turning to the statute of 'conscientious objector' that the law guarantees,'' the statement said.

Portugal is 90 per cent Catholic.

It said all those Catholics who had turned against the church's doctrine in the referendum should examine the ''demands of loyalty to the church they belong to and the true fundamentals of their doctrine.'' The ruling Socialists, who had argued the current abortion ban leads to thousands of clandestine abortions every year, said the new law allowing abortions in the first 10 weeks of pregnancy should go through parliament by July.

REUTERS BDP HS0906

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