DUBLIN -- Ireland's abortion ban subjects women to discriminatory, cruel and degrading treatment and should be ended immediately for cases involving fatal fetal abnormalities, UN human rights experts said Thursday.
The 29-page report from the Geneva-based UN Human Rights Committee accepted a complaint filed by Amanda Mellet, a Dublin woman who was denied a 2011 abortion in Ireland after doctors informed her that her fetus had a heart defect and could not survive outside the womb.
Ireland permits abortions only in cases where the woman's own life is endangered by continued pregnancy. Its ban on abortion in all other circumstances requires women to carry a physiologically doomed fetus until birth or its death in the womb. The only other option is to travel abroad for abortions, usually to England, where thousands of Irish citizens have abortions annually.
The Human Rights Committee, composed of experts from 17 nations led by Fabian Salvioli of Argentina, found that Ireland's abortion law violates the UN International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and called for widespread reform.
The panel wields no power to compel change from Ireland, a predominantly Roman Catholic nation that maintains the strictest laws on abortion in the 28-nation EU.
In Dublin, Mellet said she hoped the government would find "the courage to make necessary changes in law."
"I hope the day will soon come when women in Ireland will be able to access the health services they need in our own country, where we can be with our loved ones, with our own medical team, and where we have our own familiar bed to go home and cry in," she said in a statement. "Subjecting women to so much additional pain and trauma simply must not continue."
Ireland's health minister, Simon Harris, said the government understood the plight of women in Mellet's position and was open to reforming law on the matter. But he said the process could take years, requiring first a citizen's forum to build public consensus followed by a referendum to amend Ireland's constitutional ban on abortion.
"I have met with families who have been through the trauma of knowing their baby will not survive and I have been very moved by hearing of their experiences. I want to see this issue addressed," Harris said.
Rights watchdogs said Ireland needed to move faster, noting that it had taken the country more than two decades to legalize abortions deemed necessary to save a pregnant woman's life. That move happened after the 2012 death in an Irish hospital of an Indian woman, Savita Halappanavar, who suffered lethal blood poisoning after doctors refused to terminate her dying fetus.
Mark Kelly, director of the Irish Council for Civil Liberties, said the UN criticism "joins a chorus of expert voices reminding Ireland that its abortion regime is wildly out of kilter with abortion law and practice in the family of civilized nations."
"The Irish government must take its head out of the sand and see that it has to tackle this issue," said Colm O'Gorman, Amnesty International's director in Ireland.
Opinion polls since 2013 have recorded majority support in Ireland for extending abortions to cases involving fatal defects and pregnancies caused by rape or incest, but anti-abortion activists argue that further exceptions to the ban would lead eventually to the legalization of abortion.
An Irish group opposed to abortion, the Pro Life Campaign, denounced the UN as a pro-abortion lobby group. Its leader, Cora Sherlock, argued that Mellet's fetus should have been given the chance to survive, regardless of medical opinion.
Sherlock said all fetuses should be carried to full term to ensure their right to life is vindicated. She said UN experts were wrong to treat unborn children with fatal abnormalities as "unworthy of any legal protections."
The UN report said Ireland's law made the rights of inviable fetuses superior to the rights of women and this arbitrary imbalance "cannot be justified," because in such cases the unborn child's life cannot be saved. It said Ireland's restrictions on providing clear advice and state-supported medical care to women who receive abortions overseas caused Mellet "intense suffering" and her experience "amounted to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment."
The experts also found that Ireland's underlying criminal law on abortion was "discriminatory because it places the burden of criminal liability primarily on the pregnant woman."
Mellet testified that Dublin doctors informed her during scans that her child was likely to die inside the womb but could not be aborted, only removed after it perished. After three weeks, she checked with doctors to see if her now 24-week-old fetus still had a heartbeat and, when told it was still alive, travelled with her husband to the English city of Liverpool. There, doctors induced a 36-hour labour that ended in a stillborn baby girl.
Mellet was denied any access to state-funded bereavement counselling in Ireland because Irish maternity hospitals are permitted to provide such services only to women who agree to carry their fetuses to birth or miscarriage.
Her legal complaint was accompanied by expert opinions from a Trinity College Dublin professor in midwifery and a clinical psychologist who found that Ireland's restrictions inflict unnecessary long-term trauma on women carrying fetuses likely to die.
Mellet told the UN panel she had wanted to take her stillborn daughter's remains back with her to Ireland on the plane but the hospital said it had no way to facilitate this.
"She received the ashes, unexpectedly, three weeks later by courier, which deeply upset her," the report said.
Associated Press reporter Jamey Keaten in Geneva contributed to this story.