The woman, from Mumbai, and her husband have argued that not only will the child be born with abnormalities and face consequent difficulties, but forcing the woman to continue with the pregnancy will also cause her trauma and affect her "mental health".
A bench of justices R M Borde and Rajesh Ketkar are now in a quandary.
The Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act has provisions to allow a woman to terminate her pregnancy even if it has gone beyond the permissible 20-week period if the pregnancy and child-birth poses a threat to the woman's physical health or life, the Act does not deal with the mental health of the woman.
The MTP Act permits abortions after consultation with one doctor up to 12 weeks. Between 12 to 20 weeks, medical opinion of two doctors is required. Beyond the 20-week, exceptions are legally permissible only if continuation of the pregnancy poses a threat to the mother's life.
In all such petitions that come before the Bombay HC, the court first refers the case to a medical board of expert doctors for their opinion on whether or not such pregnancy poses a threat to the life of the woman concerned.
Often other benches of the Bombay HC have permitted such petitioners, several of whom were minors, and also victims of rape, to terminate the pregnancy if the board had ruled there exists a risk to the woman's life, or in some cases, if the board affirms that the foetus has irreparable or grave medical abnormalities.
The petitioner's lawyer Meenaz Kakalia has urged the court to go beyond the definition of the health and life of the woman and the risks to it as defined under Section 5 of the MTP Act.
The bench, however, is in a fix, as the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare proposed amendments to the Act in 2014 - including introducing the concept of risks to the mental health of the woman and also the idea of substantial foetal abnormalities - in the latter case, a pregnancy can be terminated at any point during the pregnancy - the draft bill with such amendments is yet to be ratified by Parliament.
Incidentally, during his previous tenure as a judge on the Aurangabad Bench of HC, Justice Borde had permitted a victim of rape to terminate her pregnancy, even though it was beyond the 20-week ceiling and posed no threat to her physical health, after she threatened to commit suicide.
The bench is likely to pass an order on the present plea on Tuesday, January 10.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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