In France, People Who Speak Against Abortion Will Now Be Treated As Criminals

Pro-life activists hold a protest rally against proposed changes to French abortion law in Paris on Jan. 19, 2017. Reuters

People who try to discourage women from having abortions are now virtually considered criminals in France.

By a show of hands, French lawmakers voted to pass the law "sanctioning websites that aim to dissuade women from terminating a pregnancy by using 'misleading claims' on abortion."

By "misleading," they mean websites which "emphasize the negative psychological and physical impacts that abortions can have on women," according to the National Right to Life.

Violators of the new law, which was passed on Feb. 16, face a punishment of two years in jail or a €30,000 ($37,000) fine, The Catholic Herald reported.

France has already imposed a ban on pro-lifers demonstrating outside abortion clinics.

Pro-choice supporters argued that the new law is needed since pro-life activists have moved their campaign online, which they say has got to be stopped.

Laurence Rossignol, the minister for women's rights, said pro-life activists could still voice their opposition to abortion, as long as it was "under the condition they openly state who they are, what they do and what they want," according to Agence France Presse.

Days before the law was passed, tens of thousands of protesters vented their fury at the measure during a mass rally in Paris in January.

Archbishop Georges Pontier of Marseille, president of the French bishops' conference, had reportedly conveyed to President Francois Hollande his concern over the new law, calling it a "serious infringement of democratic principles."

CBN News reported on the new French law, by saying, "Your free speech rights are canceled! That's the message the French government is sending to anyone who wants to defend the rights of the unborn on the internet in France.

"Bottom line: The government has decided that people who express pro-life beliefs online will now be treated as criminals."

The European Center for Law and Justice (ECLJ) Director Grégor Puppinck said the law also affects churches.

"(It) may prohibit the church from publishing its position on abortion. If you teach that it is a sin, then teaching itself would be sufficient for prosecution," Puppinck said.

related articles
Tim Tebow\'s Mom Says She Was Told To Abort Baby But Kept Him Because \'We Chose To Trust God\'
Tim Tebow's Mom Says She Was Told To Abort Baby But Kept Him Because 'We Chose To Trust God'

Tim Tebow's Mom Says She Was Told To Abort Baby But Kept Him Because 'We Chose To Trust God'

\'The Greatest Genocide In History\': One Billion Babies Aborted Worldwide In Past Century
'The Greatest Genocide In History': One Billion Babies Aborted Worldwide In Past Century

'The Greatest Genocide In History': One Billion Babies Aborted Worldwide In Past Century

16-Y-O Student Slams \'Teen Vogue\' For \'Disgusting\' Article That Tells Girls Abortion Is \'OK\'
16-Y-O Student Slams 'Teen Vogue' For 'Disgusting' Article That Tells Girls Abortion Is 'OK'

16-Y-O Student Slams 'Teen Vogue' For 'Disgusting' Article That Tells Girls Abortion Is 'OK'

News
Priest refuses communion to MP who backed assisted suicide
Priest refuses communion to MP who backed assisted suicide

Is communion to given to anyone who wants it, to be regarded as holy or used as a political tool?

Who was really behind the Syria church bombing?
Who was really behind the Syria church bombing?

The situation in Syria remains dangerously opaque.

Jimmy Swaggart, famed televangelist brought down by scandal, dies at 90
Jimmy Swaggart, famed televangelist brought down by scandal, dies at 90

Jimmy Swaggart, the popular Pentecostal preacher and televangelist who garnered national headlines for his extramarital affairs, has died at the age of 90 following a cardiac arrest.

Glastonbury and the banality of evil
Glastonbury and the banality of evil

When the Glastonbury mob were calling for death to the IDF, they were in effect calling for the death of Israeli Jews.