OPEN DOOR COUNSELLING LTD ; AND DUBLIN WELL WOMAN CENTRE LTD ; AND OTHERS v. IRELANDDISSENTING OPINION OF MR. E. BUSUTTIL
Doc ref: • ECHR ID:
Document date: March 7, 1991
- Inbound citations: 0
- •
- Cited paragraphs: 0
- •
- Outbound citations: 0
DISSENTING OPINION OF MR. E. BUSUTTIL
I find myself unable to subscribe to the opinion of the
majority that the Supreme Court ban on the dissemination of
information about abortion services in the United Kingdom constituted
a breach of the applicant companies' freedom to impart information
regardless of frontiers ensured by Article 10 of the Convention. I
consider that, while the information ban was an obvious interference
within the meaning of Article 10 para. 1, such interference was
justified in that it was prescribed by law and was necessary in a
democratic society for the protection of morals and the protection of
the rights of others under paragraph 2 of the same Article.
(i) Prescription by law
Irish law provides comprehensive protection of the right to
life up the unborn. In terms of the Offences against the Person Act
1861, the procurement of abortion is a criminal offence; in addition,
aiding and abetting such an offence is itself an offence under the
general criminal law in Ireland. Again, under the Censorship of
Publications Act 1946, the Censorship of Publications Appeals Board
may ban the sale and distribution of future issues of any publication
advocating the procurement of abortion. The ban in the instant cases
concerns a roughly parallel situation. Finally, and more importantly,
the Eight Amendment to the Irish Constitution, adopted by the Irish
people in a referendum and now enshrined in Article 40.3.3°,
acknowledges the right to life of the unborn as an overriding
principle of State policy in Ireland, involving a compulsive political
obligation of implementation.
In those circumstances, it should have been reasonably
foreseeable by any Irish citizen of voting age and ordinary
intelligence that any activity which might at some stage have led to
the procurement of an abortion, even if it occurred abroad, would
sooner or later have been open to challenge in the Irish courts since
the effects of such an abortion would ultimately have been felt in
Ireland.
(ii) Legitimacy of the aim pursued
I accept the position of the Irish Government that the problem
of abortion and information about abortion procurable in neighbouring
countries is a moral issue with a profound dimension. The Irish
people have rejected abortion in a referendum held fairly recently,
culminating in a constitutional amendment by virtue of which the State
acknowledges the right to life of the unborn and guarantees respect
for that right in its legislation. Accordingly, there is a general
acknowledgement in Ireland that the unborn must be protected from the
moment of conception, not only from a moral standpoint, but also from
a recognition of their status as "others" within the meaning of
Article 10 para. 2 of the Convention. Indeed, as the Court pointed
out in the Muller case (Eur. Court H.R., Muller and Others judgment of
24 May 1988, Series A No. 133, para. 30), there is a natural link
between the protection of morals and the protection of the rights of
others.
For these reasons, the interference with the applicants'
freedom of expression in the present cases had the legitimate aim of
protecting morals and the rights of others.
(iii) Necessity for the interference in a democratic society
The Court has consistently held that the word "necessary" in
Article 10 para. 2 implies the existence of a "pressing social need".
Contracting States have a certain margin of appreciation in assessing
the existence of the need, but such assessment is ultimately subject
to the supervisory jurisdiction of the Convention organs embracing
both the legislation and the decisions applying it. In exercising
their jurisdiction, the Convention organs remain free to determine
whether the interference at issue is proportionate to the legitimate
aim pursued and whether the reasons adduced by the national
authorities to justify it are relevant and sufficient.
In the instant cases, the pressing social need emanated from
the overriding principle of State policy embodied in Article 40.3.3°
of the Irish Constitution protecting the right to life of the unborn.
The means employed were a court injunction inhibiting within the Irish
jurisdiction the dissemination of information to pregnant women about
abortion services in the United Kingdom which could ultimately have
resulted in the destruction of the life of the unborn. The
information inhibited was thus extremely limited. Viewed against the
background of the seriousness of the moral issue involved, it cannot
be deemed to have been disproportionate.
Today, as at the time of the Handyside judgment, it is still
not possible to find in the legal and social orders of the Contracting
States a uniform European conception of morals. In view of the
absence of such uniformity, the national authorities are in principle
in a better position than the Convention organs to judge the moral
requirements of a particular society, as well as the necessity of any
restrictions imposed with a view to meeting them. As far as the
present cases are concerned, it is also essential not to lose sight of
the fact that the Irish authorities had been in direct touch with
vital public opinion in Ireland through a recent referendum on the
subject.
In all the circumstances, therefore, and having particular
regard to the margin of appreciation enjoyed by the national
authorities under Article 10 para. 2, I come to the conclusion that
the Irish courts were entitled to consider it "necessary" for the
protection of morals and the rights of others to restrict the abortion
referral information provided by the applicant companies in order to
sustain the logic of the constitutional protection afforded to the
unborn in the Irish Constitution.
LEXI - AI Legal Assistant
