UPDATE: Zoe’s Law has been passed by the NSW Lower House, 63 votes to 26.
The bill now moves to the upper house where it will be debated. If passed, Zoe’s Law will change the Crimes Act so that any foetus more than 20 weeks old –or weighing more than 400g – will be regarded as a person when it comes to charging someone with grievous bodily harm.
Opponents of the law worry about the affect it could have on abortion laws.
If you’re not familiar with Zoe’s Law, here’s is a cheat sheet Mamamia previously ran.
By CATHERINE HENRY
It was a terrible tragedy. Brodie Donegan was 32 weeks pregnant when she was hit by a car on the NSW central coast. The driver was high on a cocktail of drugs, including methadone.
As a result of the accident, Brodie lost her baby, who she called Zoe. The woman driver responsible was charged with grievous bodily harm – a criminal offence under the Crimes Act – for the injury she inflicted on the mother. But she couldn’t be charged with a separate offence of injuring Zoe, as the law currently sees a woman and the unborn baby as one and the same.
1. Should we change the law?
Today, MPs in the NSW Legislative Assembly will be asked to consider an amendment to the Crimes Act known as ‘Zoe’s Law’. The changes, if passed, will mean that any foetus more than 20 weeks old –or weighing more than 400g – will be regarded as a person when it comes to charging someone with grievous bodily harm. In other words, someone who damages a foetus will be responsible for injuring it, separate to any injury they cause to the mother.
Top Comments
I totally agree with this law, I don't agree with the whole foetus and child debate, to me once I have fallen pregnant from the day of conception I have a living child growing inside me. I think that if we're old enough to have sex, and play adult games, then we are old enough to deal with the responsibilities that come from it. A different circumstance of course is if somebody was subjected to rape and fell pregnant but other than that I don't really agree with abortion. I don't disrespect anyone else for their decisions of course, but this is my own personal view. From another angle this law is good because when I was pregnant with my son I had severe bleeding at 23 weeks of pregnancy. I was scared I might lose my baby, and the hospital were concerned that I could be miscarrying. The midwives told me that should anything go wrong, my baby would not be saved, because in the eyes of the law, it is not considered a child until 26 weeks. Thankfully everything turned out ok, but I can't imagine how many children must have died because they were a few weeks off being considered a baby.
I changed my mind about this when I heard a radio interview with a lady lawyer who had suffered a similar tragedy at 38 weeks, talking about it. She said it was a slippery slope to give an unborn person 'human rights' in about every way, but mostly in relation to the mother, whose own rights would then be compromised or diminished, not only with regard to termination but everything.