It’s all over but the voting for the 14 petitions at the Supreme
Court questioning the constitutionality of the Reproductive Health
Law—that is, if you believe media reports. With all the speculation
going around, it doesn’t help that most media accounts have focused on
how the first presenter, lawyer Concepcion Noche, was “rebuked” by the
15 justices. One account said the petitions faced dismissal because of
the way Noche struggled through the four-and-a-half-hour ordeal. A law
professor even wrote a postmortem for the anti-RH petitions, claiming
they didn’t have a case.
But what really happened during the oral arguments on July 9? The
following exchange, for instance, was never reported in the media:
Justice Roberto Abad: The Constitution, Section 12 Article 2,
states that the state shall equally protect the life of the mother and
the unborn from conception. This right to life belongs to the unborn,
not the mother or the father. Did I exist when I was still in the egg as
an egg alone?
Noche: Not yet, your honor.
Abad: But when the egg, when the ovum, is fertilized, is that the beginning of me?
Noche: Yes, your honor. That’s the beginning of you. The unique
“you” that exists already at that point. The unique Justice Abad … not a
justice yet then.
Abad: In 1987 before this (RH Law) somewhat changed the concept
of conception, how did those who drafted the Constitution understand the
meaning of conception?
Noche: Life begins at fertilization. It was only recently that that was redefined.
Abad: So in other words, all of us started
as zygotes … and then developed into a human being. Conception means
beginning, isn’t it? But it needs to be sustained to life by attaching
itself to the uterus. And it’s not the business of my parents… It’s my
right. If they violated my right, I would not have been born. As Justice
Carpio says on this issue, if they believe that this law violates the
right to life from the time of conception, that’s how we will decide it …
on our understanding of when life begins.
Totally different picture. The issue is of
course crucial, because the hormonal contraceptives to be funded in the
billions by the RH Law are known abortifacients—they have a secondary
action of harming the fertilized ovum when contraception fails. A
recognition of the beginning of life at fertilization would render the
RH Law unconstitutional.
To be sure, Noche agonized and showed signs
of exhaustion. She was, after all, facing all 15 justices of the
Supreme Court, but she stood her ground. At one point Justice Antonio
Carpio called attention to her long pause, suggesting she had run out of
answers. But Noche didn’t let it pass: “No, your honor, I paused
because I was reading something.”
The rather tough approach by some justices
notwithstanding, Noche’s arguments stood out in substance and even
managed to get her interrogators to move on to another topic.
To Carpio’s position that the high court
could not settle the issue of when life begins, Noche was firm that the
Constitutional Commission was clear that conception referred to
fertilization. To Chief Justice Lourdes Sereno’s suggestion that there
were only a handful of ConCom members who maintained that belief, Noche
said the Constitution was voted upon and ratified by the Filipino
people.
In his turn, Justice Mariano Del Castillo
remarked, “I concede that upon the meeting of the egg and the sperm
there is life already. It should be protected.”
There were in fact more justices who
believed there was no mystery as to the beginning of life. Justice
Teresita de Castro was pragmatic: “Assuming that the woman is healthy
and the egg has already been fertilized, is there anything that will
prevent this fertilized egg from developing into a human being?”
To settle the matter, Justice Lucas
Bersamin told Noche to submit data on the beginning of life and the
effects of hormonal contraceptives for the court to take judicial
notice.
Del Castillo asked what Noche thought
should be the government’s responsibility for adverse effects of
contraceptives given to women by its health workers. Noche replied that
the government must shoulder all expenses related to their treatment.
Justice Jose Perez offered the view that
the beginning of life was not even the biggest issue in the RH debate.
Taking off from the opening statement of former senator Francisco Tatad,
Perez told Noche that what was “constitutionally objectionable” was
“the fact that the government itself is putting in money in order to
allow the prevention of fertilization.”
De Castro pursued the issue of Tatad’s main
argument that the RH Law was nothing but a population control program
disguised as a health measure. “There is a provision saying that there
shall be no demographic or population targets… But in another provision
there is a need to conduct studies to analyze demographic trends,
including demographic dividends from sound population policies. It would
seem that the law is intimately connected to population control.”
Abad said the RH Law was an exercise of
police power. “We cannot outlaw the storms or the typhoons … but a
healthy woman with a healthy ovum and eggs… We poison the egg to disable
it from receiving the sperm. That’s unconstitutional, that’s improper
use of police power.”
Finally, De Castro observed that the RH Law
was targeting the poor and the marginalized. “It would seem under this
law that the poor should not be allowed to multiply.”
No case? It’s time we extracted substance from the noise of this long-drawn-out debate. The buck stops with the Supreme Court.
Chet Espino is a convener of Families
Against RH. The audio recording of the July 9 oral arguments is on
YouTube
(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j7ehdk126S4&feature=youtu.be).
source: Philippine Daily Inquirer Column of Chet Espino
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