Australia\'s Queensland state legalises abortion

Australia's Queensland state legalises abortion

AFP  |  Sydney 

lawmakers have voted to legalise abortion, overturning a century-old "morality" law and capping a 50-year campaign in Australia's most conservative state.

The legislation also creates 150-metre (492-feet) "safe access" zones around clinics offering abortions where protests are banned, and it requires doctors who refuse to perform abortions to refer women elsewhere.

Pro-choice campaigners had been seeking since the 1970s to overturn an 1899 criminal code adopted from British law that criminalised as an "offence against morality".

Abortions were rarely prosecuted in the state, but pro-choice campaigners had until now been unable to overturn the criminal code.

This week's vote come at a time when women hold positions of influence in politics. The is headed by two-term Annastacia Palaszczuk, whose deputy, Jackie Trad, is a long-time

Queensland's main conservative opposition Liberal (LNP) is also led by a woman,

The LNP remains officially opposed to abortion, but Frecklington allowed its lawmakers to vote their conscience, helping push the measure through.

"History has been made," Palaszczuk tweeted after the vote. "Women will no longer have the fear of committing a crime when making the deeply personal decisions over their own bodies." Anti-campaigners vowed to pursue their efforts.

One group, Life, called the vote "devastating news".

"The fight will continue. The unborn need us more than ever," it said in a statement.

was the latest of Australia's states and territories to ease restrictions on and leaves New South Wales, which includes Sydney, as the only state where it remains illegal to terminate a pregnancy, even if the law is rarely applied.

Women in New continue to have abortions, although they and the doctors who perform the procedures risk criminal prosecution.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, October 18 2018. 07:00 IST