Iowa Approves 'Most Restrictive Abortion Bill in US'

The US state
of Iowa has approved an abortion law banning most abortions once a foetal
heartbeat is detected.
Republican
lawmakers passed the bill in back-to-back votes, sending it to the governor's
desk to sign into law.
If it comes
into effect the bill will ban most abortions after six weeks of pregnancy, and
rights groups say it will be the country's most restrictive.
Critics
argue it will make having an abortion illegal before most women even realise
they are pregnant.
Iowa's
Republican Governor Kim Reynolds has not said if she will sign the bill.
Last year,
Iowa Republicans successfully banned abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy.
The
so-called "heartbeat" bill would require any woman seeking an
abortion to have an ultrasound to screen for a foetal heartbeat. If one is
detected, she will be barred from obtaining a termination.
Some
exceptions have been introduced - in cases of rape and incest, where it has
been reported to authorities, and to save the woman's life.
"We're
in the majority for a reason and that includes advancing the pro-life
cause," Republican Representative Shannon Lundgren told the
Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier.
"We are
alive when our hearts start beating and our life is over when it stops,"
Dawn Pettengil, another Republican Representative from Iowa, told CBS News.
Democratic
Representative Beth Wessel-Kroeschell spoke against the legislation on the
floor of the Iowa House of Representatives on Tuesday.
"All
women, regardless of age, income or race, should be able to obtain reproductive
health services, including abortion, free from political and economic
barriers," Ms Wessel-Kroeschell said.
Iowa's
Planned Parenthood and the American Civil Liberties Union groups have also
spoken out against the bill.
"These
extreme attempts to ban abortion fly in the face of both medical and legal
standards, as well as common sense and public opinion among Iowans," said
Erin Davison-Rippey, Planned Parenthood of the Heartland's director of public
affairs in an online statement released in February, when the bill was
first introduced.
"So-called
'heartbeat protection' bills are actually bans on safe, legal abortion, and
they threaten to set reproductive rights back by decades."
Elizabeth
Nash, of the sexual and reproductive health policy group the Guttmacher
Institute, told the BBC this was "the most restrictive abortion ban in the
country".
She and Iowa
Democrats have suggested the bill is intentionally unconstitutional.
If Ms
Reynolds signs the bill into law, it will likely be challenged in court for
possibly violating Roe v Wade, the US Supreme Court ruling that legalised
abortion in 1973.
The ruling
states some women have a right to terminate pregnancies until a foetus is
viable.
No, in fact
some Republican lawmakers welcomed the challenge.
"I
would love for the United States Supreme Court to look at this bill and have
this as a vehicle to overturn Roe v. Wade," Republican Senator Jake
Chapman said.
A string of
US states have enacted abortion bans or stringent restrictions over recent
decades only to have them overturned by the courts, prompting some
conservatives to take aim at the landmark ruling.
"We
created an opportunity to take a run at Roe v Wade," Republican state
Senator Rick Bertrand acknowledged.
Iowa is
among a number of states, including Mississippi and Kentucky, that have
triggered court challenges by imposing tight restrictions on abortion.
President
Donald Trump supports an abortion ban and has indicated that this is a
priority, and Republicans are seizing the opportunity that creates, say
commentators.
FROM bbc.com/news/world-us
 
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