Dutch
Pro-lifers Pray As 'Abortion Ship' Sets Sail
By Patrick Goodenough
CNSNews.com London Bureau Chief
June 11, 2001
London
(CNSNews.com) - Dutch pro-lifers prayed at a North Sea dockside
Monday, shortly before a ship left a nearby port to take its
message of "reproductive rights" and offer of offshore
abortions abroad.
In
a symbolic gesture, supporters of the Cry for Life group threw
bottles into the sea at the Hoek of Holland, carrying SOS
messages urging other nations "to come to the rescue
of our country" and warning them about the dangers of
the Netherlands' latest "export."
Later
Monday afternoon, the world's first "abortion boat"
sailed from the nearby port of Scheveningen, spokesperson
for the organizers, Joke van Kampen, confirmed.
It
is heading for Ireland, where abortion remains illegal in
most cases.
The
Women on Waves organization hopes to sail the ship to mostly
Third World countries, where its staff will promote abortion
and contraception, train medics in abortion techniques, and
carry out abortions in international waters, under Dutch law.
The
idea has caused alarm in some quarters in the Netherlands.
"Our
country is exporting a lot of good products and has the biggest
harbor in the world," Cry for Life President Bert Dorenbos
said by telephone.
"Now
we are starting to export evil stuff - [same-sex] marriages,
euthanasia, drugs ... soon we may have a 'death pill' for
the elderly. We are known in Holland for the export of evil
products," he said.
"We
are calling our country [to return] to normal, and for the
international community to stand up and speak and to come
and help our country, and especially we call on Christians
for prayer. Dutch Christians are against abortion and complain
about it, but when it comes to political action or to make
a stand they are reluctant," Dorenbos said.
"Holland
has been a blessed country over the years sending out many
missionaries around the world. They brought the message of
life. Today Holland exports a message of death," he added.
Although
he is saddened by the sailing of the abortion boat, Dorenbos
said it may be that the "pro-abortionists have gone too
far" with this latest campaign.
"People
with any amount of common sense will be able to see that this
idea is out of all proportion. Even pro-abortion proponents
see the foolishness of this plan," he said.
Dorenbos
said it was the height of insensitivity for the boat to visit
Africa, "where AIDS is causing the death of whole regions
of population," only to offer "to kill even more
people."
The
Women on Waves ship's first stop will be Ireland, where the
organization said in a statement it would sail into Dublin
port on Thursday afternoon. It has been invited by a coalition
of pro-abortion and left-wing Irish groups.
The
group's founder, Dutch abortion doctor Rebecca Gomperts, says
at least 70,000 women around the world die each year unnecessarily
during unsafe, illegal abortions.
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