Katholieke Stichting Medische Ethiek
24 april 2024

Meerderheid Europees Parlement stemt voor abortus als mensenrecht

Katholiek Nieuwsblad, 25 juni 2021

door Selinde van Dijk-Kroesbergen

Moet abortus gezien worden als een recht van iedere vrouw? Ja, oordeelde een ruime meerderheid van het Europees Parlement donderdagmiddag.

Met 378 stemmen voor, 255 stemmen tegen en 42 onthoudingen werd de resolutie over seksuele en reproductieve gezondheid donderdag 24 juni aangenomen.

Met de resolutie van de Kroaat Predrag Matić, het zogenaamde Matić Rapport, wil het Europees Parlement de lidstaten oproepen om beter voor de rechten van vrouwen op te komen. Het gaat in het rapport met name om het recht van vrouwen om zelf te bepalen hoe ze met hun vruchtbaarheid omgaan en om het recht op gezinsplanning.

Volgens tegenstanders is dit rapport misleidend, omdat abortus daarin een mensenrecht wordt genoemd. Matić stelt in zijn rapport dat niets de toegang tot abortus provocatus in de weg mag staan. Daarbij geeft hij ook geen ruimte voor zorgverleners die in gewetensnood komen.

Europarlementariër Peter van Dalen (ChristenUnie) vindt het ronduit zorgelijk dat een meerderheid van het Europees Parlement voor het Matić Rapport gestemd heeft: “De vrijheid van geweten staat op het spel”, vindt hij.

Bert-Jan Ruissen, Europarlementariër van de SGP, ziet de uitslag iets positiever: “De uitslag van de stemming is betreurenswaardig, maar tegelijk is het aanzienlijke aantal tegenstanders toch een bemoedigend signaal. Het is belangrijk dat ook in het Europees Parlement een belangrijke groep wil vasthouden aan het recht op leven in plaats van een recht op abortus.”

Op meer gehoopt

Onder de voorstanders zaten Nederlandse partijen als VVD, D66, GroenLinks, PvdA, PvdD en ook een CDA’er. Ruissen denkt dat de linkerflank op meer had gerekend. “Dit ligt duidelijk controversieel en is niet de afgetekende overwinning waar links-liberalen op hadden gehoopt. De politieke druk die uit de stemming had moeten voortvloeien, valt dus nogal mee.”

Verdeeld CDA

Opmerkelijk is dat de CDA-delegatie verdeeld was. Behalve een voorstander, was er ook een tegenstander, terwijl drie CDA-parlementariërs zich onthielden van stemming.

In een korte reactie laat Europarlementariër Annie Schreijer-Pierik weten dat zij de tegenstemmer was. “Net als de CDA-delegatie, hecht ik ook grote waarde aan het beschermen en verder versterken van vrouwenrechten. Maar het Matić Rapport is daarin doorgeslagen. Ik heb hier dan ook vol overtuiging tegengestemd. Het gaat tegen al mijn principes vanuit het katholieke geloof en waar ik voor sta in.”

‘Vrijheid van geweten is grondrecht’

Peter van Dalen vindt de uitslag een buitengewoon zorgelijke ontwikkeling: “In een samenleving waar geen gewetensbezwaren meer mogen zijn, wordt men gedwongen slechts één bepaalde opvatting te hebben.”

Volgens Van Dalen staan daarmee fundamentele grondrechten van de EU op het spel: “Zoiets kennen we van allerlei dictaturen op onze planeet, maar dit mag in de lidstaten van Europese Unie beslist niet de norm worden. De vrijheid van geweten is een grondrecht voor iedere democratische rechtsstaat.”


Overgenomen met toestemming van Katholiek Nieuwsblad.


Pauselijke Academie voor het Leven: palliatieve zorg is een mensenrecht

Monsignor Paglia’s Address at a Conference in Qatar

“Palliative care is a human right,” affirmed Monsignor Vincenzo Paglia, President of the Pontifical Academy for Life. “Different international programs are implementing it, but the true human right is to continue to be recognized and welcomed as a member of society, being part of a community,” he stressed.

Monsignor Paglia made these comments on opening the works of the Conference entitled “Muslim and Christian Perspectives on Palliative Care and the End of Life,” which began on January 22, 2019, at Doha, in Qatar, reported “Vatican News” in Italian. The two days of study, organized by Georgetown University and the WISH program of the Qatar Foundation, began with the signing at Qatar of a Joint Declaration on the End of Life and Palliative Care, by the World Innovation Summit for Health (WISH) and the Pontifical Academy for Life.

Palliative care is a reaction to the “throw-away culture,” which renders normal euthanasia and indifference to others, said Monsignor Paglia, stressing its importance today when one witnesses “the marginalization, discrimination and elimination of the most fragile human beings, such as those that suffer serious, disabling or incurable illnesses.”

“I consider it urgent to intensify the reflection to address more solidly the great anthropological questions and the immense ethical challenges that present themselves to us with the questions that concern the end of life,” continued Monsignor Paglia.

Recalling the contribution of religions ”to give concrete impulse to this was the form of accompaniment of sick or dying persons,” Monsignor Paglia stressed  “the capacity of religions themselves to reach humanity’s peripheries,” but also the essence itself of religions, described as being part of “veritable forces of palliative care.”

“Palliative care embodies a vision of man of which their great religious traditions are the guardians and promoters: that is the most profound and incisive contribution that they can make in terms of motivation and inspiration,” added Monsignor Paglia.

The President of the Pontifical Academy for Life recalled “the specific mandate that Pope Francis gave to the Pontifical Academy for Life on the occasion of the 25thanniversary of its institution. “ The Holy Father called to “reinvent a new fraternity,” he said, “such is the anthropological and social challenge of our time.”

By way of conclusion, Monsignor Paglia said that the palliative care community witnesses in a new way a living together that puts the person and his good at the center. In this community, the good of each is pursued as being a good for all.


Mgr. V. Paglia: Palliatieve zorg is een basaal mensenrecht

Address of mgr. Vincenzo Paglia to the conference “Muslim and Christian Perspectives on Palliative Care and End of Life”,  organized by the Pontifical Academy for Life and Georgetown University in Qatar Doha

January 22-23, 2019

I would like to join in the greeting offered by Dean Dallal and welcome you, both for myself and on behalf of the Pontifical Academy for Life, to our Conference dealing with “Muslim and Christian Perspectives on Palliative Care and the End of Life.” This conference is part of the Academy’s wider PAL-LIFE project that is dedicated to the increased acceptance and full implementation of palliative care around the world. I first of all thank Georgetown University in Washington DC, represented here by Doctor John Borelli, then Georgetown University in Qatar, represented by Dean Ahmad Dallal, and I thank Sultana Afdhal, Chief Executive Officer of the World Innovation Summit for Health (WISH) Community sponsored Qatar Foundation. Their contributions to the scientific and organizational aspects of this event have been invaluable. It is an honor to collaborate with such prestigious and culturally committed institutions.

Historically, the palliative care movement was born at the middle of the last century to give specific medical and social attention to incurable cancer patients and relieve the complex of symptoms that accompany the most advanced stages of the disease until death.

From the beginning, palliative care includes not only the management of symptoms and care for the needs of the patient, but also preparation for death, in the realization that it is not only inevitable for all, but that it must be dealt with in particular ways when a disease is incurable and the progression to death is unstoppable. Palliative care also includes the patient’s family, or those others who are closest, as beneficiaries of accompaniment.

We are aware of the importance that palliative care can assume, inside and outside medicine, in times like ours where we witness marginalization, discrimination, and the elimination of the weakest of human beings, such as those suffering from a serious, disabling or incurable disease. We want to oppose the “throw-away culture”— and we know how pervasive it is in most of contemporary society— by promoting a “palliative care culture,” that overcomes the attraction of euthanasia and assisted suicide, and that leads to the greatest possible acceptance of a culture of care that enables us to accompany the dying with love until the end.

To accomplishing this, I think we must reflect as deeply as possible about the great anthropological questions and enormous ethical challenges we face in dealing with the end of earthly life. For this reason, our efforts in this Conference will be directed to exploring what palliative care can offer to those human needs that arise from the power of the human spirit. We will take consider not only clinical experience, but also the contributions that science and the deathless truths that religions preach about mystery of humanity.

Today the palliative care scientific community recognizes the important role that religions play in advancing this form of accompaniment of the sick or dying, given the ability of religions to reach the peripheries of humanity, those who in every community are in some way most in need. While this is certainly true, religions are and do much more. Religions are not only able to facilitate a greater presence of palliative care where it is needed, but they are one of the true component forces of palliative care itself. Total attention to the person is made much more difficult by economic hegemonies that colonize contemporary cultures and societies. The result of this situation can be only a culture, or rather anti-culture, of wastefulness. An understanding of human existence and of reality that values religious experience allows us to see and affirm a good that surpasses and is not limited by economic calculus. Recognition of the integral openness of the person to transcendence makes it possible to state that in human life, even when it is fragile and seems to be defeated by illness, there is inalienable value. Palliative care represents a vision of man that is preached and protected by the great religious traditions. In terms of motivation and inspiration, this is the most profound and trenchant contribution palliative care can receive.

Palliative care today represents for all of us a concrete initiative within a climate of vanishing love for humanity and a crisis of social ties that beginning with a generic disengagement is now reaching a real social disintegration that involves all social structures, beginning with the family. Societas as a communion of persons, no matter what form it takes, is necessary for self-realization of the individual. While the individual is not the servant of society, society is not merely an instrument for the self-realization of the individual. It is rather a condition that allows for the such realization. It is difficult to make what is human develop in a society where relationships are mummified. The ego, as it is more and more conceived of by postmodernity, becomes an force for dissolution, not for bonding; exclusion, not inclusion; fluidity, not consolidation. It is therefore essential to foster not only problem-solving, which can be superficial, but also the lasting dream of a new humanism for all, and of universal brotherhood. Reinventing a new brotherhood is the anthropological and social challenge of our day and is the specific charge that Pope Francis gave to the Pontifical Academy for Life on the occasion of the twenty-fifth anniversary of its creation, which will be celebrated on February eleventh. The text of the Holy Father’s letter is in your folders. Here too, religions have a very special word to say.

Dependency—a human condition that is a focus of religions and palliative care—is indeed human and should be appreciated, when freely chosen, as an inalienable human value. The ego finds its fulfillment in relationship, in the “we.” The “we” is no less innate in us than the “I.” It is clear that our existence is marked by a permanent movement from the “I” to the “we.” Humanism must necessarily be marked by solidarity. The task of “caring for” the other, and for creation, is very different from the false, predatory and destructive attitude so often adopted by man—not only towards nature and the earth, but also against brothers, especially when they are perceived as obstacles or no longer useful. The palliative care community bears witness to a new way of living that focuses on the person and his good, to which not only the individual but the whole community tends. In this community the good of each person is pursued as a good that benefits everyone. Palliative care is a human right, and various international programs are working to implement it; but the basic human right is to continue to be recognized and accepted as a member of society, as part of a community.

The Conference which we are about to begin will open with the signing, by me and Sultana Afdhal, of a Joint Declaration on the End of Life and Palliative Care, issued by WISH and the Pontifical Academy for Life, two institutions of different faiths, but sharing the task of study, scientific advancement and cultural development; two academic institutions that specifically in palliative care find a fruitful ground for encounter and cooperation in order to reach a new humanism for the benefit of all persons and all peoples. In this context I would like to express my appreciation for the scientific and cultural contribution that WISH has offered to the international community through its activities, not least for the work of the group on “Islamic Ethics and Palliative Care” led by Dr. Mohammed Ghaly, who presented its results during the Summit celebrated here in Doha last November. This was a valuable starting point for our work.

I hope that these two days can make an effective contribution to making palliative care—which is called on every day to face great challenges in accompanying the dying—more well-known and fully accepted by public opinion, and can give rise to a fruitful new humanism for the benefit of all. I am sure that we can work together effectively and learn much from each other. I wish everyone a very profitable two days.