MADRID - Spain has taken a first step toward amending its restrictive law on abortion, a government minister said yesterday, moving to fill one of the last big gaps in a drive for sweeping social change in this traditionally Roman Catholic country.
A panel of 13 lawyers, doctors and other experts has been appointed to come up with recommendations for the Socialist government on how to amend the current law, Equality Minister Bibiana Aido told reporters.
She said she expects a bill to be presented to Parliament in the first six months of 2009, but could not specify whether it would provide for abortion on demand up to 12 to 14 weeks into a pregnancy, as demanded by abortion rights campaigners. The current law, which dates from 1985, allows abortion in the first 12 weeks in case of rape, 22 weeks in case of fetal malformation, and at any time if a psychiatrist certifies that the mother's physical or mental health is endangered.