MPs vote to reduce abortion for women in England and Wales

MPs have voted to change abortion laws to prevent women in England and Wales to prose in their pregnancy.
Gower, Labor MP for Tonia Antoniazi, led the call to reduce the 1% of the abortion after 24 weeks, stating that these were âdesperate womenâ, who required ânot criminalizationâ compassion.
As an issue of Vivek, MPs were allowed to vote according to their personal beliefs, and supported the plan with a large majority of 242 votes.
The current law in England and Wales states that abortion is illegal, but for the first 24 weeks of pregnancy and beyond some circumstances such as the womanâs life is in danger.
Amendment of Antoniazi in crime and policing bill will remove threats of investigation, arrest, prosecution or imprisonment for late miscarriage.
Determining his arguments, he said that about 99% of the miscarriage of pregnancy occurs before reaching 20 weeks, âonly 1% of women in desperate conditionsâ.
Antoniazi highlighted a series of cases where women were arrested for illegal abortion crimes and urged MPs that âthese women need care and support, not criminalizationâ and support their amendments to identify â.
âEach of these cases is a traxy, which is capable of our old abortion law,â he said.
âOriginally passed by an all-man Parliament selected by men alone, this Victorian law is rapidly used against weak women and girls.â
Stela Kreesi asked that the MP âwants to maintain old laws in any size or form for all our componentsâ for all our components â.
For Walthmsto, the Labor MP urged MPs to go ahead to carry forward each other, ate segments related to any abortion of the 1861 Act, and increased the reach of abortion as human rights.
It was publicly supported by 108 MPs before the debate â but abortion providers, including British pregnancy advisory service, said that the amendment was not the right way to achieve âgenerational changesâ, and it did not go on one vote.
Orthodox Chhaya Health Minister Dr. Caroline Johnson carried forward a third amendment, aimed at a pregnant woman needed a pregnant woman before determining the drug to end her pregnancy.
The Johnson amendment collapsed, with voting against 379 MPs and 117 voting.
Earlier, the Antoniazi amendment won support against 137 from 379 MPs.
The New Antoniazi clause will not change any law about the provision of abortion services within the healthcare setting, including the time limit, telemedicine, grounds for abortion, or the requirement of two doctorsâ approval.
It was supported by all the main abortion providers, as well as 180 MPs across the Commons and 50 organizations including the Royal College of Obstatrisan and Gynecologist (RCOG).
However, the Society for the Protection of unborn children called it a âextreme and dangerous proposalâ that effectively reduces abortion â.
Only three women were convicted of illegal abortion between 1861 and November 2022, when the law was changed when women were changed to allow women to take abortion pills at home for 10 weeks of pregnancy.
The record collected by the UKâs largest abortion services found that at least 100 women have been examined for abortion in the last five years, and six have appeared in courts.
Investigation of illegal abortion is increasing, BBC told
MP to vote to reduce abortion â how to change the law

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