Supreme Court rejects NI free abortions appeal
The UK's highest court has narrowly rejected an appeal by a mother and daughter in their legal battle for women from Northern Ireland to receive free abortions on the NHS in England.
Last updated 14th Jun 2017
Supreme Court justices announced their three to two majority decision in London on Wednesday.
The 20-year-old woman at the centre of the appeal was 15 in October 2012 when she and her mother travelled from Northern Ireland to Manchester and was told she had to pay hundreds of pounds for a private termination because she was excluded from free abortion services.
They originally lost their action in the High Court in London in May 2014 when a judge ruled that the exclusion was lawful.
The judge concluded that the Health Secretary was entitled to adopt a residence-based system so that women resident in Northern Ireland are not entitled to benefit from NHS abortion services in England, even though they are UK citizens.
The mother and daughter, who cannot be named for legal reasons, suffered a further defeat at the Court of Appeal in 2015.
The Supreme Court's deputy president Lady Hale and Lord Kerr said they would have allowed the challenge against that earlier decision.
Announcing the Supreme Court's decision, Lord Wilson said the justices had been sharply divided'' about the outcome.
The majority however had concluded that the Health Secretary was entitled to reach the decision he did.
He said it was not for the court to address the ethical considerations which underlie the difference'' in the law regarding abortion in Northern Ireland and England.
Lord Wilson added: But the fact is that the law in Northern Ireland puts most women in unwanted pregnancy there in a deeply unenviable position.''
During the proceedings last year lawyers for the mother and daughter said women and girls from Northern Ireland were being treated as second class citizens''
Amnesty International has called the decision “a further blow to women from Northern Ireland, who already face some of the harshest abortion laws in Europe.”
Grainne Teggart, Campaign Manager for Amnesty International in Northern Ireland, said:
“This ruling means that women and girls from Northern Ireland will continue to be treated as second class citizens. As ever, it is the most marginalised women who will be worst affected.
“It is vital that changes to abortion laws in Northern Ireland go ahead without delay so that women who need an abortion can have one there rather than having to travel to England.