by
Steven Ertelt
LifeNews.com Editor
September 23,
2009
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Warsaw,
Poland (LifeNews.com) -- A court in Poland today fined a Catholic
magazine for likening a woman to a killer for wanting to get an abortion
allegedly because she would go blind if she did not have an abortion.
The case eventually netted Poland a 25,000 euro fine from the European
Court of Human Rights.
The
European Court of Human Rights issued a decision in September 2007
upholding its previous
ruling making Poland pay a woman $52,000 for denying her an abortion.
The woman couldn't get an abortion in 2000 after claiming that giving
birth damaged her eyesight and she is now unable to take care of her
three children.
The European Court of Human Rights sided with Alicja Tysiac.
Commenting on the case, the Catholic magazine, Gosc Niedzielny, published by the Katowice archdiocese, compared Tysiac to a Nazi and condemned her for wanting an abortion.
Judge Ewa Solecka ruled Wednesday that Catholics are free to express their moral disapproval of abortion but are not allowed to publicly vilify an individual. Solecka ordered the magazine to pay Tysiac 30,000 zlotys (nearly $11,000) and issue her a written apology.
Solecka said the magazines language was particularly contemptuous of Tysiac, according to an AP report.
Following the ruling, the editor of Gosc Niedzielny (Sunday Visitor), Rev. Marek Gancarczyk, wrote: We live in a world where a mother receives an award for very much wanting to kill her child, but not being allowed to do so.
Gancarczyk compared abortion to the ghastly medical experiments performed at Auschwitz by Josef Mengele, saying, They had become accustomed to the murders being carried out behind the fence of the camp. And what is the case today? Different, but just as terrible."
The
magazine denounced Wednesdays ruling as an infringement on freedom
of speech and said it would appeal, AP indicated.
Tysiac went to doctors when she found out in February 2000 that she
was pregnant a third time. Three ophthalmologists alleged that carrying
the pregnancy to term would damage her eyesight but they refused to
sign off on a paper needed to approve an abortion for health reasons.
Tysiac also consulted with a gynecologist who told her there was no medical reason to have an abortion.
After having a Cesarean section in November 2000, Tysiac claims her eyesight deteriorated considerably due to a retinal hemorrhage.
Poland
appealed the first decision and the European court affirmed its previous
ruling alleging the pro-life nation violated article 8 of the Convention
on Human Rights.
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