An 11-year-old girl who was reportedly raped by her uncle can have an abortion in Romania on exceptional grounds, the country’s government ruled today.
The family of Florina Vranceanu say she was raped by her 19-year-old uncle when she was only 10 years old, but she is legally barred from having an abortion at home because the baby is now 20 weeks old. Terminations after 14 weeks are allowed in Romania only if the mother is in serious medical danger or the foetus is badly deformed.
An emotive letter from the girl was read out at a meetin of a government committee which was to rule on the case today. It said: “I want to go to school and to play. If I can’t do this, my life will be a nightmare.”
Romanian government committee member Vlad Iliescu, who read out the letter, said a 21-week-old foetus would have a 1% chance of survival.
He added that “the girl’s mental health would be severely affected if she had a baby”.
Members had discussed the options of allowing the girl to travel to Britain for a termination or ruling she must continue with her pregnancy.
The UK has one of the highest legal limits for abortion in Europe at 24 weeks. A Romanian living in Britain offered to meet the abortion costs.The girl’s parents discovered she was pregnant earlier this month after they took her to a doctor because she appeared unwell.
She told doctors she had been raped by her uncle, who has since disappeared. Debate about the girl’s situation sparked a protest among church groups in Romania and today’s decision is unlikely to end the row.
Twenty pro-life Christian Orthodox groups threatened to press charges if the girl was allowed to have a termination in Romania on exceptional grounds.
In contrast, the Romanian Orthodox Church argued the decision should be left to the girl’s family. Child rights groups appealed for tolerance because the girl was a rape and incest victim.
Last month, MPs rejected calls to lower the upper time limit for abortions in the UK.
It remains at 24 weeks after they turned down several proposals, ranging from 12 to 22 weeks.
Agencies