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Legalize abortions in first trimester, German commission urges

A government spokeswoman declined to comment on whether abortion could now be legalized before Germany's next election in 2025. Conservatives are against any easing of abortion laws.

BERLIN (AFP) — Abortion should be legalized in Germany in the early stages of pregnancy, a commission set up by the government recommended on Monday.

Under current German law, abortion is illegal but tolerated in practice for women who are up to 12 weeks pregnant and have received compulsory counseling.

There are also exceptions for women who have been raped or whose life is in danger.

The commission, set up last year by Chancellor Olaf Scholz's coalition government, recommended relaxing the law in a 600-page report published on Monday.

The current situation is "untenable," said Liane Woerner, a law professor and member of the group, urging the government to "take action to make abortion legal and unpunishable" in the first trimester.

The commission also recommended examining whether abortion could be made legal at up to 22 weeks.

In the later stages of pregnancy, abortion should remain illegal, but "does not necessarily have to be punishable," Woerner said.

The government will now study the report "carefully to determine the next steps," Justice Minister Marco Buschmann told a news conference, warning against "debates that could inflame our society."

The Center for Reproductive Rights NGO welcomed the commission's recommendations, saying Germany now had a "historic opportunity to modernize the law".

"German law on abortion stigmatizes women who seek abortion care and demeans their ability to make autonomous and informed decisions about their pregnancies," said Adriana Lamackova, associate director for the NGO in Europe. 

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Reforming Germany's abortion law was a flagship pledge of the current government, a coalition between Scholz's Social Democrats, the Greens and the liberal FDP.

In 2022, the German parliament voted to remove a Nazi-era law that limited the information doctors and clinics could provide about abortions.

Government spokeswoman Christiane Hoffmann on Monday declined to comment on whether abortion could now be legalized before Germany's next election in 2025. 

"It will depend on how the debate develops," she told a government news conference.

The opposition conservatives and the far right have rejected any relaxation of the law.

Agence France-Presse

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