Abortion: the ordeal of Polish women

Abortion the ordeal of Polish women

A year after the virtual ban on abortion in Poland, the problems remain. At the end of January 2022, a 37-year-old woman pregnant with twins died of complications caused by her pregnancy, having been unable to abort. According to the new law in force, abortion in the event of a serious malformation of the fetus has now become illegal… only the endangerment of the woman’s life, incest or rape can be taken into account.

Result: 33,000 women aborted at home with abortion pills or in clinics abroad because in Polish hospitals, there is a climate of fear, and few doctors are listening to women’s requests. It is the report in Warsaw by our correspondent Sarah Bakaloglou.

The consequences of Brexit

Stuck in the Party Gate scandal, these repeated parties organized in full confinement at 10 Downing Street, Prime Minister Boris Johnson is trying to find loopholes to calm the revolt. There is, of course, the international scene and Ukraine, but also Brexit!

The head of government, the one who negotiated the exit of the United Kingdom from the European Union, wants to propose a new law to stand out a little more from European regulations.

On the ground, 13 months after the establishment of the new trade agreement which governs the country’s relations with the EU, entrepreneurs are mainly talking about additional administrative work, additional costs and sometimes supply difficulties…. it’s the report by Marie Billon.

And for Northern Ireland, what may be the political consequences of Brexit, when we know that the part concerning Northern Ireland in the agreement continues to be denounced by London.

While the city of Derry commemorated, this Sunday, January 30, 2022, the 50th anniversary of Bloody Sunday. The province fears more than anything a resurgence of tensions, even violence between the North and the South, we listen to the explanations of our correspondent in Dublin, Laura Taouchanov.

The chronicle In a nutshell: the Mulino Bianco famiglia

It’s always a bit of euphoria in Italy. The latest statistics confirm an unprecedented economic boom, in 2021, with growth of 6.5%. President Sergio Matarella finally agreed to remain in his post, a guarantee of stability, which allows Mario Draghi to remain at the head of the government where he seems to be the only one able to keep the coalition together.

In short, for the moment, Italy is on a small cloud, just like the advertising films of the biscuit brand Mulino Bianco which present an ideal Italian family. The Mulino Bianco family is the chronicle In a nutshell Franceline Beretti.

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