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Catholic bishop quits Amnesty over abortion

By Emily Dugan

A Roman Catholic Bishop has become the first high-profile Catholic in England to withdraw support for Amnesty International following the organisation's decision to back abortion as a viable option for women who have been raped.

The Rt Rev Michael Evans, Bishop of East Anglia, who had been actively involved in the human rights charity for 31 years, claimed he would be the "first of many" to cancel his membership after leaders voted overwhelmingly in favour of including access to abortion in their definition of human rights.

Rev Evans, 55, said he was "very sad" at abandoning his work with the organisation. "There are undoubtedly many Catholics who will now sadly have to withdraw membership," he said. "Bishops, priests and lay people will have to make a very serious decision about their memberships, and I would expect them to make the same decision.

"The question of abortion is so central to Catholic opinion that it will make it difficult for Catholics to remain involved. I feel I cannot continue, and I know from people writing to me that others have already done the same. But individuals need to decide for themselves."

Mike Blakemore, a spokesperson for Amnesty, yesterday defended the change in stance. "The policy is not pro-abortion, but it allows women to make a decision about their sexual health free from coercion, discrimination and violence," he said. "We recognise the protection of the foetus as inseparably linked to the right to health and life of the mother."

Rather than forcing people to turn their back on the charity, Mr Blakemore said, the move had attracted a rash of new members who agreed with its stance on a woman's right - albeit in certain extreme circumstances - to choose.

The policy change, which was approved at a meeting of senior international Amnesty representatives in Mexico this month, had been awaited with trepidation by Catholics around the world. The Vatican had already warned that it would expect believers to snub the charity if it took the stance. Earlier in the month, Cardinal Renato Marino, head of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, said: "If, in fact, Amnesty International persists in this course of action, individuals and Catholic organisations must withdraw their support."

The Vatican accuses Amnesty of double standards because it opposes the death penalty in all circumstances but, it argues, under some circumstances will now condone the killing of an unborn child.

Bishop Evans said that by campaigning for abortion, the charity were not representing the human rights of the child. "The most important human right is the right to life," he said. "A human rights organisation should take account of the most vulnerable human life that there is: the unborn child in the mother's womb. We need to show compassion for women who've been raped, but you shouldn't deny the human rights of the child."

Amnesty International was founded by a Catholic convert in 1961, and, although it has never been officially affiliated to the church, this association has meant that some members of the Catholic community have seen this latest decision as an affront.

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