Liberal Catholic Group Wants Pope to Allow Abortions
to Fight Zika
A Roman Catholic group appealed to Pope Francis
on Wednesday to allow Church members to "follow their conscience" and
use contraception or to let women have abortions to protect themselves against
the Zika virus.
The appeal came as the World Health Organization
(WHO) advised women in areas with the virus to protect themselves, especially
during pregnancy, by covering up against mosquitoes and practising safe sex
with their partners.
Zika has been linked to severe birth defects in
thousands of babies in Brazil and is spreading rapidly in the Americas. The
first known case of Zika in the United States was reported last week by local
health officials, who said it was probably contracted through sex and not a
mosquito bite.
Catholics for Choice, a liberal advocacy group
based in Washington, said in a statement it would run ads in the International
New York Times and El Dario de Hoy in El Salvador on Thursday, the eve of a
papal trip to Cuba and Mexico.
"When you travel tomorrow (Friday) to Latin
America, we ask you to make it clear to your brother bishops that good
Catholics can follow their conscience and use birth control to protect
themselves and their partners," the ad will say, according to advance
excerpts released in the statement.
Catholics for Choice asked Francis, Latin
America's first pope, to "really stand in solidarity with the poor".
"Women's decisions around pregnancy,
including the decision to end a pregnancy, need to be respected, not
condemned," it said.
The Catholic Church teaches that life begins at
the moment of conception and that abortion is killing. It bans artificial birth
control such as condoms, arguing that they block the possible transmission of
life.
The ban, enshrined in Pope Paul's 1968
Encyclical "Humanae Vitae," is widely disregarded in many advanced
countries, but activists say there is still a stigma attached to birth control
in some Latin American countries because of the edict.
In 2010, former Pope Benedict said in a book
that the use of condoms to stop the spread of AIDS may be justified in certain
exceptional cases. The Vatican has so far not addressed the issue of
contraception in relation to the Zika crisis.
In its announcement on Wednesday, the WHO said:
"Women who wish to terminate a pregnancy due to a fear of microcephaly
should have access to safe abortion services to the full extent of the
law."
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