Who
Is Torturing Whom?
Satan
is indeed the father of lies,
and a master at turning things
topsy-turvy in order to confuse
and deceive people. Pro-life
violates torture convention?!
Is not abortion in fact the
greatest of tortures? Tearing
the unborn infant limb from
limb while still alive? Burning
the infant in the very womb
of his/her mother? Crushing
the skull? Helpless, with nowhere
to go, the pure innocent child
is indeed horribly tortured.
This cries out to high heaven
for justice!
May
the Lord impose His justice
on the world, crushing His foes
and those who flaunt their power
and authority against His.
God
bless and protect us all.
frank
UN
Committee Says Nicaraguan Pro-Life
Laws Violate Torture Convention
By
Piero A. Tozzi, J.D.
NEW
YORK, NY, May 28, 2009 (C-FAM)
The United Nations (UN) committee
charged with monitoring compliance
with the Convention Against
Torture has declared that Nicaragua’s
full protection of unborn life
violates the country's obligations
under the Convention. This is
the first time this committee
has reviewed Nicaragua since
the country's government outlawed
abortion for any reason three
years ago.
The
torture committee is the fourth
UN committee to pressure Nicaragua
with respect to its laws protecting
unborn life, joining the committees
charged with monitoring the
Convention on the Elimination
of All Forms of Discrimination
Against Women, the International
Covenant on Economic, Social
and Cultural Rights (ICESCR)
and the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights.
Critics
are increasingly concerned with
what they view as the politicization
of the treaty monitoring system
by committees charged with oversight.
Neither the Convention Against
Torture nor any other UN treaty
mentions abortion, and it was
not contemplated when such treaties
were negotiated and ratified
that countries were committing
themselves to altering domestic
legislation on abortion.
In
contrast, the Committee on the
Elimination of Racial Discrimination
(CERD) has conscientiously construed
its mandate as focusing on actual
instances of racial discrimination.
Because of its refusal to expand
its mandate beyond the scope
of the treaty that created it,
such as by engaging in abortion
advocacy, CERD has been criticized
by some in the human rights
establishment.
Among the human rights lobbyist
organizations that have increasingly
lent a voice to abortion advocacy
in the developing world is Amnesty
International, which abandoned
its previous neutrality on the
issue in 2007. In a shadow briefing
to the torture committee, Amnesty
asserted that Nicaragua's legislation
banning all abortions was equivalent
to government commissioned “torture”
or at least “cruel, inhuman
and degrading treatment”
banned by the Convention.
Amnesty
also claims that Nicaragua's
law "causes women and girls
to die," an assertion disputed
by pro-life critics. Carlos
Polo, Director of Population
Research Institute’s Latin
American Office and a close
observer of maternal health
developments in Nicaragua, notes
that "the best indicator
of what is happening in any
country regarding bad practices
in gynecological and obstetric
services are rates of maternal
mortality." Polo points
to statistics compiled by Nicaragua’s
Ministry of Health showing that
maternal deaths have decreased
since Nicaragua tightened its
laws on abortion.
In comparison with Amnesty’s
efforts to link abortion restrictions
with maternal death regardless
of what the evidence shows,
even the unambiguously pro-abortion
Center for Reproductive Rights
(CRR) has begun to shy away
from making such claims. In
a recent submission to the ICESCR
committee, CRR criticized Brazil
for emphasizing lack of access
to abortion as "the most
salient cause" of maternal
mortality, pointing instead
to its failure to provide emergency
obstetric care. CRR went so
far as to praise Sri Lanka for
reducing maternal mortality
– a country that CRR elsewhere
acknowledges as having one of
the most restrictive abortion
laws in the world.
In
addition to Nicaragua, the torture
committee has in the past pressured
Chile and Peru, whose constitutions
protect unborn life.
(This
article reprinted with permission
from http://www.c-fam.org/)
"For
to me life is Christ, and death
is gain." (Phil 1:21)