TABLE OF CONTENTS MAIN BODY...................................................................................................................................1 REFERENCES................................................................................................................................2
MAIN BODY Summarize laws relating to abortion, the death penalty and assisted dying Abortion is a legal practice under certain circumstances in England, Wales and Scotland based on the Act of Abortion 1967 and liberal abortion laws in Europe and is still prohibited in Northern Ireland. Abortion is allowed in UK during the first twenty-four weeks of the pregnancy and beyond for medical reasons and that act are as follows: Section 1 (1) of the Abortion Act 1967 in England, Wales and Scotland reads: A person shall not be guilty of offense under law relating to abortion when pregnancy is terminated by a registered practitioner and agreed by two doctors that there were medical grounds for it (Sedgh, G. and et.al., 2012). The murder or Abolition of Death Penalty Act 1965 is the act of parliament of United Kingdom that abolished the death penalty for homicide in Great Britain and it replaced the penalty of death with mandatory sentence of imprisonment of life of the culprit (Hood and Hoyle, 2015.). The act renders is to abolish punishment for capital murder in case of persons convicted in UK or corresponding offence by court in connection to make provisions for the punishment of culprit that leaves four capital offences; piracy with violence, crime, kill or grievous body harm, incendiarism in royal dockyards and espionage. Suicide Act of 1961 is an offence to aid, counsel and assist or procure the suicide of another and that individual who committed this crime is liable to imprisonment for long term exceeding fourteen years (Delamothe, Snow and Godlee, 2014). Euthanasia is the act of deliberately ending a person's life to relieve from pain and suffering, depending on the circumstances is regarded as murder with life imprisonment penalty. 1
REFERENCES Books and Journals: Delamothe, T., Snow, R. and Godlee, F., 2014. Why the Assisted Dying Bill should become law in England and Wales.BMJ: British Medical Journal (Online),349. Hood, R. and Hoyle, C., 2015.The death penalty: A worldwide perspective. OUP Oxford. Sedgh, G. and et.al., 2012. Induced abortion: incidence and trends worldwide from 1995 to 2008.The Lancet.379(9816). pp.625-632. 2