Ritratti: Jimxu biex iwasslu messaġġ favur il-ħajja

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Illejla fil-Belt Valletta qed tittella’ “il-mixja għall-ħajja”.

B’xemgħa f’idejhom, dawk li qed jieħdu sehem fil-mixja qed iwasslu messaġġ kontra l-abort f’kull forma tiegħu.

Fost dawk li qed jieħdu sehem, hemm ukoll Dr Rebecca Kiessling, li din il-ġimgħa f’intervista ma’ Newsbook.com.mt saħqet li l-abort mhux is-soluzzjoni f’każ ta’ stupru u l-ulied frott minn stupru għandhom dritt li jgħixu bħal kulħadd.

Il-mixja bdiet minn quddiem Kastilja kompliet għal quddiem il-Konkatidral ta’ San Ġwann u waslet għal Bieb il-Belt fejn quddiem il-bini tal-Parlament tħejja palk apposta u qed jieħdu sehem grupp ta’ mużiċisti.

Ritratti: Ian Noel Pace

Ref: http://www.newsbook.com.mt/artikli/2016/12/3/ritratti:-jimxu-biex-iwasslu-messagg-favur-il-hajja.54009/

Life Network Foundation holds candlelight march for life

The Life Network Foundation Malta this evening organised the second edition of the Malta Stand Up for Life march, a continuation of the campaign by local pro-life groups to defend life from conception.

Rebecca Kiessling (below), a child born of rape, took part in a Malta Stand Up for Life candlelight march. Participants gathered in front of Castille from where they walked down Merchants Street, turned into St John Street (passing in front of St John’s Co-Cathedral) and up Republic Street, finishing in front of Parliament.

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Ref: http://www.independent.com.mt/articles/2016-12-03/local-news/Life-Network-Foundation-holds-candlelight-march-for-life-6736167469

‘Abortion in cases of rape simply cannot be allowed’ – victim’s daughter

Allowing abortion in cases of rape not only puts unborn children at risk but also sends a message that the life of those conceived by rape is worth less, according to a victim’s daughter.

“It tells us: you should not even be here, you were not worthy of protection,” Rebecca Kiessling told Times of Malta.

Swapping out “people born out of rape” with some other group of people, such as Jews, made you realise how horribly discriminatory this was, the 47-year-old American lawyer argued.

“Can you imagine proposing an exception for abortion in cases of Jewish babies? Can you imagine the outrage: how dare you target this group of people?

“The message sent to every Jewish person is that their life is not worth living and that they’re worth less than everybody else. And this is the message that is sent to my people group (born to rape victims): that we don’t deserve to be living.”

Pro-life campaigner Dr Kiessling is in Malta as a guest of the Life Network Foundation and she was speaking to Times of Malta ahead of a candle-lit vigil which will be held in Valletta tomorrow.

Dr Kiessling, adopted from birth in Michigan, learnt when she was 18 that she was conceived out of a brutal rape at knife-point.

She had petitioned the court for non-identifying information about her birth family, and while there were several details about her mother, the only information about her father was that he was Caucasian and of large build.

It sounded like a police description, so she called her adoption case worker and asked her straight out whether her mum had been raped. The reply was in the affirmative and the news left her “devastated”.

She met her birth mother Joann a year later, who told her that when she discovered she was pregnant, she had seen a rape counsellor, who advised her to terminate the pregnancy.

I’m not advocating for people to be created out of rape. I’m advocating for people not to be killed

She actually booked an appointment at two back-alley clinics, but backed out both times because she was worried about her safety.

Had abortion been legal in Michigan back then, she would have gone through with it, she told Dr Kiessling.

“There is a documentary called Back Alley Detroit. I can watch this documentary and see the men who were going to take my life. I know the place, time, manner and how much money was on my head. I know all the details of my impending death.

“For some people their near-death experience is waking up from a coma. For me this was my near-death experience. I owe my birth to the law that protected me.”

Dr Kiessling insists that just because she values her life, it does not mean she is pro-rape, something she has been accused of.

“I’m not advocating for people to be created out of rape. I’m advocating for people not to be killed.”

Dr Kiessling has also been confronted with the argument that keeping the baby is not fair as not all children born out of rape have a good upbringing.

But she insists that no one is guaranteed a good life. People assumed she spoke that way as she had a good childhood.

“My adoptive father beat me up and my adoptive mother had undiagnosed and untreated bipolar disorder. Just because I didn’t have a great childhood doesn’t mean that I think my life didn’t have value.”

The woman had wanted to be a lawyer since she was 10, and one of her missions nowadays is to push for legislation that gives rapists no paternal rights over children conceived of their abuse.

Such legislation was signed into US federal law last year by President Barack Obama, making it more attractive for the individual states to legislate similarly.

She has met several women whose rapist used child visitation rights as an opportunity to continue raping the mother, or even start abusing the children themselves.

The rape victims, and their child, should be legally protected from the rapist and Dr Kiessling is drafting a proposal for Maltese legislators, following similar efforts in Ireland and Northern Ireland.

The rapists often gain access to the child when they are sued for child support, especially if the mother is on State benefits.

Asked whether this could be abused by mothers who have consensual sex but want to cut ties with the father, Dr Kiessling noted that women who cry wolf do a disservice to actual victims as even one false claim could increase the belief that women exaggerate abuse allegations.

Just because there was potential for abuse of the system it did not mean that children and rape victims should not be protected, she insisted.

The candle-lit vigil will start at 5.30pm in front of the Auberge de Castille tomorrow and end in front of Parliament, where Dr Kiessling is expected to deliver a keynote speech.

Ref: http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20161202/local/abortion-in-cases-of-rape-simply-cannot-be-allowed-victims-daughter.632631

Woman conceived by rape tells authorities to ‘punish rapists, not babies’

Rebacca Kiessling, a woman conceived by rape, has called on the authorities to punish rapists not babies. Speaking at a conference organised by the Life Network Foundation, the 46-year-old from Michigan gave a heartfelt plea for Maltese authorities not to consider the introduction of abortion, not even in cases of rape.

“Abortion will simply add more violence to an already violent issue,” she insisted while addressing members of the media.

Accompanied by Miriam Sciberras, the mother of five has come all the way from the United States as she fears “Malta could be at risk, like many other countries, to introduce abortion.” Dr Kiessling, who is a lawyer, has founded an organisation to help rape victims and people who, like her, were conceived by rape. “The battle for this cause is all over the globe, and I intend to fight it.”

Dr Kiessling intends to meet with local legislators and policy makers.

She explained how her mother was raped by a serial rapist and considered committing abortion twice. “I was not lucky, I was protected,” she says. “My life was spared and I want to provide a voice to the voice less.”

“It is very barbaric to punish an innocent unborn child for a crime committed by someone else. We speak about protecting rapists from the death penalty but when it comes to abortion, we are willing to sacrifice the life of a baby.”

Asked to comment on the morning after pill, Dr Kiesling said that the people need to understand how it works. “They tell them that it will not terminate pregnancy when in fact it can.”

“The military never drops a drone strike if there is the slightest doubt that there is someone in the building. So why don’t we also err in the side of caution when it comes to save a baby still in the womb?”

Rebecca Kiessling will be attending a walk organised by the Life Network Foundation which will be held on Saturday.

Ref: http://www.independent.com.mt/articles/2016-11-28/local-news/Woman-conceived-by-rape-tells-authorities-to-punish-rapists-not-babies-6736167202

Child of rape victim says Morning After Pill is a shot in the dark

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The morning after pill offers no guarantee that it will not prevent a fertilised egg from implanting in a woman’s womb, pro-life campaigner Rebecca Kiessling insisted today.

The 46-year-old American advocate, daughter of a rape victim, is in Malta as the guest of the Pro-Life Network.

“Would you reverse the car at the mere thought of having a child standing at the rear? No, because you would want to err on the side of caution. The same holds true for the morning after pill, which may prevent a fertilised egg from implantation,” she said.

The ethical debate over the MAP centres around whether the pill can prevent an already fertilised egg from implantation with pro-lifers insisting this would be abortive.

Dr Kiessling said the literature accompanying the morning after pill is based on the redefinition in the US of when a pregnancy starts. She noted that in the wake of the Roe vs Wade case, a US Supreme Court ruling that legalised abortion in the 1970s, the American medical authorities redefined pregnancy as starting on implantation.

“But women are being intentionally misinformed about the possibility that the morning after pill could stop a fertilised egg from implanting [and so terminating human life],” Dr Kiessling said.

However, she said the availability of MAP could also instigate a lack of compassion for rape victims and their children since they would be pressured by society to take the pill.

Speaking of her own experience as the child of a rape victim, Dr Kiessling refuted pro-abortion arguments in the case of rape.

“If you care about rape victims you should punish the rapists and not the babies… it is absolute barbaric to punish a child for somebody else’s crime,” she said, adding abortion would constitute a second violation of the rape victim’s dignity.

“I have heard pro-abortionists argue against the death penalty for rapists basing their argument on promoting civil rights but they would be ready to agree on the death penalty for the conceived child without as much as a trial,” she said.

Dr Kiessling is on an awareness tour and will on Saturday participate in a candle-lit vigil in Valletta in favour of protecting life from conception to natural death.

Ref: http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20161128/local/child-of-rape-victim-says-morning-after-pill-is-a-shot-in-the-dark.632331

Malta is now on the brink

It would not be an exaggeration to say that Malta stands on the brink of losing protection of human life from conception to natural death. As never before, Malta’s time-honoured traditions are under assault.

These past years, we have seen attempts to change the Embryo Protection Act in an attempt to introduce embryo freezing, egg and sperm donation as well as surrogacy.

The latest affront to life is the manner in which the proposed introduction of so-called emergency ‘contraceptives’ was handled. Touting international bodies, all of which are pro-abortion, their alleged experts twist facts to suit their agenda by arbitrarily declaring that drugs which harm the embryo before completion of implantation are not abortifacient, thus denying the undisputed scientific reality that new life begins at fertilisation.

Throughout, the strategy has been marked by the crass abuse of dialogue and lack of genuine consultation. Presentations at the conjoined parliamentary com­mittee were a waste of time as the agenda had already been set. Machiavellian underhand manoeuvring, abetted by powerful minority lobbies, has been the repeated pattern of action.

This relentless assault on the most fundamental value, the right to life, from conception to natural death, is not a casual happening but a deliberate and calculated political plan aimed to curry favour with a so- called ‘liberal’ section of the people who place their egoistic self-interests above everything else. Those of us who are aware of what is going on know where this is leading to.

It is for this reason that our NGO is doing its utmost to alert public opinion to what is at stake. It is now blindingly obvious that the vociferous so-called feminists, ‘humanists’ and anti-Christian lobbies are already clamouring for ‘pro-choice’ that deny that a person, in the earliest stages of life, as a fertilised ovum, has any rights.

As never before, Malta’s time-honoured traditions are under assault

What was inconceivable only a few short years ago is with us now. Abortion is on the cards.

Unfortunately, the public is largely uninformed and unaware of these far-reaching changes. The next attempt to introduce abortion will probably be based on the case of children conceived by rape. It has already been proposed that abortifacient drugs will be made available in hospital to women who are victims of rape.

An outstanding lawyer, Rebecca Kiessling, who will address a pro-life rally on Saturday, will, through her personal testimony, discredit the shameful argument that children conceived by rape lose the most sacred right: the right to live.

The inviolability of man ought to be an unassailable pillar of a civil society. Removing this most fundamental safeguard will open the floodgates that will justify the elimination of the most vulner­able, be they the aged, the terminally ill, the handicapped or the unwanted child.

Too many of us are resigned and defeatist, dismissing our responsibility in taking a stand against these uncalled for and imposed developments that do not even have a democratic mandate.

Public opinion counts. Such negative trends are not inevitable. We owe it to ourselves and future generations to make our voice heard. It is of crucial importance that we make ourselves conscious of the sinister agenda that is unfolding. This has already happened elsewhere when, by stealth and deceit, laws with sweeping consequences have been imposed.

A case in point is the scandalous manner in which abortion was legalised elsewhere. At long last, the USA is now challenging legalised abortion that has resulted in the elimination of countless millions. It is now realising the negative impact it had on the social fabric of society.

Malta is still in time to stop this corrosive trend before matters get much worse. It is for this reason that Life Network Foundation Malta, with the support of other pro-life groups, will be holding a candlelight march on Saturday (December 3) in Valletta.

It is an invitation for all of us to take a stand for life and show that we uphold this most vital value: the right to life.

Klaus Vella Bardon is deputy chairman of Life Network Foundation Malta.

Ref: http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20161128/opinion/malta-is-now-on-the-brink.632280

Malta STAND UP for Life! Candlelight March 2016

Join us on the 3rd December at 17:30 in front of Castille to light a Candle for Life! We have a responsibility to protect all life from the moment of conception until natural death and to STAND UP for life! We need your support. See you there!

[KGVID]http://staging-lifenetwork.stagingcloud.co/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/Malta-STAND-UP-for-Life-2016.mp4[/KGVID]

Unfair, unnecessary Bills

The Ministry of Social Dialogue and Industrial Relations is presenting, for parliamentary approval, two Bills, The Human Rights & Equality Commission Act 2015 and the Equality Act 2015. These Bills are being promoted as instruments that will bring Malta in line with requirements of EU directives.  They are also being sold as solutions to Maltese legal shortcomings in equality and discrimination in employment and work in general.  Nothing could be further from the truth.

In matters of employment, equality and discrimination Malta is 100 per cent compliant with EU directives and in addition current legislation is more than adequately serving employees, unions and employers.

The Equality for Men and Women Act, Chapter 456 and the Employment and Industrial Relations Act, which includes Part II – Protection against discrimination related to employment, Part IV – Enforcement and non-compliance related to employment and Part II – The Industrial Tribunal, successfully regulate all matters relating to work.

This legal framework is supported by a structure that includes a Commissioner and a Director of Labour who exercise a persuasive authority when work problems occur. The director is backed by a department that includes an advisory service to employees and inspectors to guarantee adherence to laws and rules. There is also a functioning Industrial Tribunal with all the guarantees for an impartial judicial process for all grievances, whether coming from an employee, a union or an employer.  This valid set-up must not be disturbed and messed with.

Through the proposed Bills, employers will be subjected to a justice regime different from that applicable to normal citizens.  This amended legislation will attribute to the commissioner, in competition and in parallel with the Industrial Tribunal, a wide and arbitrary authority to investigate, prosecute, judge and finally condemn an accused employer if he does not manage to prove his innocence to the satisfaction of the same commissioner.

Extreme fringes of feminist and gay lobbies are being allowed to impose their ideologies on everybody

Since the Bills of the ministry entrench the unjust ‘burden of proof’ concept, this process will occur with the accused employer deemed ‘a priori’ guilty.  So the universal principle of innocence until guilt is proven is being discarded in respect of employers.

Furthermore this proposed omnipotent commissioner is also being granted the unheard of authority to delegate any of his powers to any person holding office under him/her.  Such a measure is completely out of place in a democracy that is supposed to guarantee safeguards to ensure a competent and impartial justice process.  The MEA is hoping that legal practitioners, as promoters of equitable justice procedures, will wake up to the threat posed by these proposed two Bills.

It is worrying that extreme fringes of the gay and feminist movements seem to have the power to successfully promote unnecessary legislation which seriously threatens the rights of employers.  These Bills will definitely hinder employers’ ability to exercise their responsibilities free from frivolous and vexatious harassment. Most worryingly these Bills will create a commissioner with an obligation and power to pursue a proactive task of promoting what appear to be the radical agendas of the various gay and feminist lobby groups.

Some passages of the Bills, in particular where the empowered proactive role of the commissioner is explained (eg. surveillance of University syllabuses, etc) actually read like 1984 Orwellian texts.  The Bills are embellished with a cascade of nebulous and improbable definitions of offences and protected characteristics that will make it impossible for a targeted employer to escape an orchestrated persecution.

With no need for a complaint from anyone and with no alleged victim a commissioner may, at his discretion, initiate a procedure against any presumed employer offender.  For example, a commissioner may decide to investigate a company that has no gender balance at board level.  Being an investigator, a prosecutor, a judge and executor a commissioner will confirm the presumed guilt of such a company and demand a board gender balance rectification.

Who cares about the right of a shareholder to freely select the director to represent his shareholding interests?

Such a development results plausible after a careful reading of the text of the: “Human Rights and Equality Commissioner Act 2015”, Functions of the Commission (I) (IV), “Equality Act 2015”, Articles 6 (1) (2) (3) (b).

The MEA supports, and is in favour of encouraging gender balance and more female representation in business, which should reflect the increasing female participation in the labour force.  However, to achieve this balance the MEA does not favour or approve mandatory “positive discrimination” and the setting of quotas in favour of women.

Enshrined in law these concepts will be a statutory denial of human and other rights pertaining to employees and employers.  Positive discrimination and quotas deny unhindered access to an equal opportunity for advancement in work; they are a negation of meritocracy and will result in discrimination and mediocrity.

These two Bills are riddled with vague and unclear definitions of offences, real offences as well as offences subjectively ‘perceived’ by alleged victims.  There are also references to a transgression consisting of “an intention to offend”.

Facing a commissioner, and a priori considered guilty, an employer will certainly struggle to prove her/his innocence of the crime of harbouring an ‘intention’ to transgress.

It is inevitable that were these Bills to be adopted there will be a proliferation of frivolous as well as deliberately orchestrated litigation with employers. This litigation will be indulged in by well-known NGOs and notorious lobby groups.

Unnecessary and unjustified litigation is distracting, time-consuming and expensive to confront.  Frivolous litigation is bound to seriously obstruct the business operations of small and medium-sized enterprises.  In instances it may even result in a small business closing down.

At EU level, a supplementary and unnecessary draft directive, “Implementing the principle of equal treatment between persons irrespective of religion or belief, disability, age or sexual orientation”, has not been approved by more than eight member states and so has been stalled for six years and will soon be discarded.  This draft directive has been described, by the European Employers’ Association (Business Europe) as anti-business, inadequate, disruptive and problematic to apply.  Now it results that the two proposed Maltese Bills in their provisions go beyond this discredited and stalled EU directive.

There is a feeling that employers might be facing lobbies that have been allowed to box above their weight.  We are witnessing a leveraging of emotional pressure on a public conditioned to political correctness.  Extreme fringes of feminist and gay lobbies are being allowed to impose their ideologies on everybody.

Much as their proposals are frequently stretched to absurd limits there is a fear to resist them.  Whoever speaks up risks being viciously ostracised.   It seems employers are also facing an ineffectual political class which prevalently seeks to ensure and harvest the votes of distinct segments of the electorate.

The employers of the private sector, as they provide essential goods and services and maintain over 160,000 people in invariably decent and gainful employment, deserve much better treatment and consideration from government and politicians.  They deserve better than these two ill-advised Bills that will seriously threaten their basic rights and their ability and willingness to fulfil their important role.  There is therefore a serious need to stop these unnecessary destabilising Bills from being enacted and applied to the world of work

Arthur Muscat is president of the Malta Employers’ Association

Ref: http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20161114/opinion/Unfair-unnecessary-Bills.630981

Plan B against pregnancy

We feel that there is still much left to be said on the morning-after pill controversy.

The Parliamentary Committee has made it clear that there are two different types of morning-after pill. First, EllaOne, which can prevent a living embryo from implanting itself in the uterus or even kill an embryo after implantation. It is efficient even 120 hours after it is taken. (Committee report, pg 7)

The second one is Plan B. Plan B, if taken at a certain time before ovulation, can act as an anovulatory, which means that it prevents the ovary from releasing an egg, and therefore is not abortifacient. Plan B, after appropriate testing, such as a urine test on the woman to check whether she has ovulated or not, has been used in hospitals abroad that acknow­ledge that life starts from fertilisation.

Chris Fearne has said that both Plan B and EllaOne will be made available at Mater Dei and government clinics in rape cases. This does not seem to be lawful when the Parliamentary Committee highlighted the fact that “Maltese laws determine that life starts with the fertilisation of the ovum. Thus, any product which terminates a pregnancy after fertilisation can be abortive.” (Committee report, pg 8)

We are hopeful that the appropriate protocols will be used to make sure that the new life conceived through sexual assault, an innocent bystander, does not become a ‘second victim’ of rape through chemical abortion.

Getting it right the morning after for us means that women who end up victims of rape are to be protected as much as possible from the attacker’s sperm by having morning-after pills that will only prevent ovulation, thereby preventing conception. If it is determined that the woman is ovulating, the morning-after pill will not be able to block the egg’s release from her ovary.

We are thus strongly suggesting that EllaOne should not be licensed

Under these circumstances, the morning-after pill can function to prevent the implantation of any newly conceived embryo/s, which would be the equivalent to a chemical abortion. Under these conditions, therefore, the morning-after pill should not be administered. All embryos, whether one day or one month old, are worthy and precious and should be protected in accordance to Malta’s own laws.

We are thus strongly suggesting that EllaOne should not be licensed. It is only Plan B that should be allowed in Malta, and the appropriate testing – whether in a pharmacy, clinic or hospital – ought to be done on the woman to confirm that she has not yet ovulated before administering this pill. This will ensure that the embryo’s life is safeguarded from the very beginning.

It is imperative that the embryo’s life in the first five days between fertilisation and implantation remains protected, especially now that other laws such as the Equality Act (which considers opening IVF to all people, including singles) are in the pipeline.

In these delicate moments, when a woman is considering the morning-after pill, women should always be fully in­formed of all the risks, side effects, cautions and contraindications of these pills. The Medical Council has clearly highlighted that these pills can interact with other medicines and conditions, affecting the patient’s well-being.

Besides pills, women also ought to be offered options of concrete support, in­cluding emotional support, in case the pregnancy still goes through. This work is currently only being done with limited resources by HOPE pregnancy centre (a branch of Gift of Life) in Malta and Dar Ġużeppa Debono in Gozo.

The authors are women and mothers who work in social, educational and youth fields.

Ref: http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20161120/opinion/Plan-B-against-pregnancy.631500