Ireland Abortion Legislation: Catholic Church Dangles Threat Of Excommunication Over Lawmakers

Catholic Church Holds Threat Of Excommunication Over Lawmakers' Abortion Vote
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The Catholic Church has pointedly left the threat of excommunication hanging over Irish lawmakers who vote against the church's teachings on abortion in an upcoming parliamentary vote in the country.

The coalition government introduced legislation on abortion on Friday, following a huge international outcry over the death of Savita Halappanavar, an Indian woman who died in an Irish hospital after being denied an abortion.

Halapppanavar was told by a midwife at the hospital that was treating her that she could not have an abortion because Ireland was "a Catholic country."

The proposed legislation, which the Irish government insists merely codifies existing abortion rights, was condemned by Irish Catholic Bishops. In a statement they described the legislation as “a dramatically and morally unacceptable change to Irish law.”

Cardinal Sean Brady, the most senior Catholic cleric in Ireland, told the Irish national broadcaster that "we know what the law is about excommunication, about abortion, that's a fact."

In a separate interview, Cardinal Brady said that “the failure by the Government to allow institutions to opt out of carrying out terminations on conscientious objection grounds amounted to a denial of fundamental religious freedoms and thought.”

The New York Times reports that Cardinal Raymond L. Burke, the former archbishop of St. Louis and the head of the Vatican court, urged priests to withhold communion from politicians who supported abortion legislation in Ireland.

Cardinal Brady said bishops had not discussed if Communion should be refused to politicians who supported the bill.

The Catholic Church has traditionally wielded huge political influence in Ireland, but the child sexual-abuse scandals associated with Catholic priests and religious orders has significantly lessened its level of influence.

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Before You Go

25 Countries with Most Catholics in 2010
25. China(01 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 9,000,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 0.7Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity"Original photo here. (credit:Wikimedia Commons / Jialiang Gao)
24. Portugal(02 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 9,860,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 92.3Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity"Original photo here. (credit:Wikimedia Commons / Therese C)
23. United Kingdom(03 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 10,040,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 16.2Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity"Original photo here. (credit:Wikimedia Commons / Chowells)
22. India(04 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 10,570,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 0.9Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity"Original photo here. (credit:Wikimedia Commons / PlaneMed)
21. Angola(05 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 10,850,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 56.8Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity"Photo: Hundreds of thousands of Angolans gather on August 4, 2012 in Muxima, 150 kms from Luanda to take part in the most important Catholic pilgrimage in the country. AFP PHOTO / ESTELLE MAUSSION (credit:Getty Images)
20. Ecuador(06 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 12,060,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 83.4Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity"Original photo here. (credit:Wikimedia Commons / Krunchy)
19. Chile(07 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 12,290,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 71.8Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity" (credit:WikiMedia:)
18. Canada(08 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 13,130,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 38.6Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity"Original photo here. (credit:Wikimedia Commons / Ipsingh)
17. Uganda(09 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 14,100,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 42.2Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity" (credit:WikiMedia:)
16. Tanzania(10 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 14,250,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 31.8Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity" (credit:WikiMedia:)
15. Nigeria(11 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 20,040,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 12.6Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity"Photo: Catholic faithful attend a morning mass, at church of The Assumption in Lagos, Nigeria, Sunday, March. 3, 2013. In Africa, where the Catholic church continues to grow, worshippers and clergy attend a Sunday service without Pope Benedict XVI's leadership after he resigned at the end of February with hopes that the continent would see one of its own rise to lead the faithful. ( AP Photo/Sunday Alamba) (credit:AP)
14. Venezuela(12 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 22,500,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 77.6Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity"Original photo here. (credit:Wikimedia Commons / SuperHercules)
13. Peru(13 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 23,630,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 81.3Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity"Original photo here. (credit:Wikimedia Commons / Victoria Alexandra González Olaechea Yrigoyen)
12. Germany(14 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 27,910,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 33.9Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity"Original photo here. (credit:Wikimedia Commons)
11. Argentina(15 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 31,020,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 76.8Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity"Original photo here. (credit:Wikimedia Commons / Richie Diesterheft)
10. Democratic Republic of the Congo(16 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 31,180,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 47.3Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity"Original photo here. (credit:Wikimedia Commons / Nick Hopgood)
9. Spain(17 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 34,670,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 75.2Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity"Original photo here. (credit:Wikimedia Commons)
8. Poland(18 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 35,290,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 92.2Pew Research Center, “The Global Catholic Population"Original photo here. (credit:Wikimedia Commons / czechu81)
7. France(19 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 37,930,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 60.4Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity"Original photo here. (credit:Wikimedia Commons / Ludovic Peron)
6. Colombia(20 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 38,100,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 82.3Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity"Original photo here. (credit:Wikimedia Commons)
5. Italy(21 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 50,250,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 83Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity"Original photo here. (credit:Wikimedia Commons / Alberto Lavacchi)
4. United States(22 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 74,470,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 24Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity"Original photo here. (credit:Wikimedia Commons / Agnostic Preachers Kid)
3. Philippines(23 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 75,940,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 81.4Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity" (credit:Wikimedia Commons)
2. Mexico(24 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 96,330,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 84.9 Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity"Original photo here. (credit:Wikimedia Commons / Carlos Martinez Blando)
1. Brazil(25 of25)
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Estimated 2010 Catholic population: 133,660,000Percentage of population that is Catholic, 2010: 68.6Pew Research Center, “Global Christianity"Original photo here. (credit:Wikimedia Commons / Valter Campanato/ABr)