A teacher in China who was facing the prospect o having to have a
late-term abortion or lose her job has been allowed to give birth
following international pressure on the Chinese government.
Qin Ti is five months pregnant with her husband Meng Shaoping and they already have one daughter. Qin was initially given to the end of the month to have the abortion or she will lose her job. At five months or 20-weeks unborn babies have the ability to feel immense pain from abortion and may be more sensitive to pain than newborns.
Now, Reggie Littlejohn, the president of Women’s Rights Without Frontiers, informs LifeNews that Qin will no longer be forced to have the abortion under China’s draconian one-child policy. “This order has just been reversed, following domestic and international media attention,” Littlejohn says.
Littlejohn said news of this situation was reported widely in China and spread internationally, causing outrage. The Family Planning Commission on the Guizhou provincial level overturned the local authorities and will allow Qin Yi to have her baby.
According to the South China Morning Post, this case demonstrates “how unyielding the mainland’s birth limits continue to be despite a loosening in the 35-year-old policy to let more couples to have two children.”
Littlejohn said: “We are delighted that Qin Yi and her husband will be allowed to have their baby. Our hearts nevertheless go out to this couple because of the harrowing experience of coming so close to suffering the excruciating pain of a late-term forced abortion. Their experience dramatically demonstrates what I’ve been saying all along: China is continuing its horrific practice of late term forced abortions. This is savagery and it must be stopped.”
“China has not ‘eased’ its One-Child Policy. It has merely tweaked it,” she continued. “The fact that the Chinese Communist Party is allowing some couples to have a second child does not mean that they have ceased their appalling methods of enforcement. Couples still need to have a birth permit for the first and for the second child, or face forced abortion.”
“This case also demonstrates that the One-Child Policy is not enforced uniformly throughout China. A pregnancy may be allowed in one province and not allowed in another. There’s no uniformity. It’s like the Wild West when it comes to the coercive enforcement of birth limits,” she added.
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