Rachael Clarke remembers life before buffer zones. Almost every day, the head of staff at the UK’s biggest abortion provider would get emails from staff worried about protesters outside clinics – and women crying in the waiting room........

Rachael Clarke remembers life before buffer zones. Almost every day, the head of staff at the UK’s biggest abortion provider would get emails from staff worried about protesters outside clinics – and women crying in the waiting room.

Some of the protesters had huge placards with graphic images of foetuses. Others held candlelit vigils and said prayers. One scattered baby clothes in the bushes. “We had every­thing from people telling women that having an abortion was putting their baby in a meat grinder to people following nurses down the road in the dark telling them they were killing babies,” says Clarke.

Since buffer zones were rolled out nationally late last year – building on public space protection orders that were already in place outside some clinics – she says things have drastically improved.

Reports of alleged harassment outside British Pregnancy Advisory Service clinics have stopped almost completely. So when she heard JD Vance, the US vice-president, decrying buffer zone laws as an attack on the “liberties of religious Britons” in a speech on Friday at the Munich Security Conference – and condemning the conviction of a man, Adam Smith-Connor, who he said had been targeted for “just silently praying on his own” – she wasn’t impressed. “You can’t see these things in isolation,” she says.

Rather than being a one-off, Clarke sees the Smith-Connor case as part of a wider effort by anti-abortion campaigners to test the new law to the limits – and shift the focus away from the true reason for buffer zones to a debate about freedom of speech.

Hers is a view shared by reproductive healthcare professionals, legal experts and campaigners who believe buffer zones – intended to protect service users and staff – are being targeted in an orchestrated campaign by conservative Christian groups that are fuelling the spread of misinformation and seeking to shift the terms of the debate.

At the centre of the efforts is the Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF), a prominent conservative Christian group which opposes gay marriage as well as wanting abortion to be banned – and has been labelled an extreme rightwing “hate group” by critics including the Southern Poverty Law Center in the US.

The Observer has found that the group’s UK branch has coordinated publicity and funded legal costs in a string of cases of alleged abortion buffer zone breaches. In that of Smith-Connor, who was convicted in October, it has written blog posts, launched a fundraising campaign and is paying for a legal appeal.

Using almost identical language to that used by Vance, it has circulated statements claiming Smith-Connor is the victim of a “thought crime”. In reality, he had been prosecuted under the Public Order Act 2023, which makes it illegal for anyone to do anything that intentionally or recklessly influences someone’s decision to use abortion services, obstructs them, or causes harassment or distress, within 150 metres of a clinic. The law doesn’t explicitly mention prayer, or silent prayer, but criminalises behaviour likely to intimate staff or service users.

At the time of his arrest in November 2022, Smith-Connor had been partially standing behind a tree near an abortion clinic in Bournemouth, which was protected by a public space protection order following anti-abortion activity. He had been praying, which he said was because he and his former girlfriend had once aborted a pregnancy. But he had also been asked repeatedly to move on, by a community officer who had spoken to him for an hour and 40 minutes. Ordering him to pay £9,000 costs, district judge Orla Austin said he had breached a public space protection order and that his actions had been “deliberate”.

After Vance’s comments on Friday, the ADF celebrated online. CEO and president Kristen Waggoner – who was in Europe this week in a visit that coincided with Vance’s – posted on X: “Very grateful to Vice President @JDVance for highlighting Adam’s unjust and illiberal conviction for silent prayer in the UK.”

The ADF is also funding legal help for Isabel Vaughan-Spruce, the founder of the March for Life anti-abortion group, who has been arrested twice, but not convicted over alleged buffer zone violations, and was paid £13,000 by West Midlands police.

A prosecutor had said the case had not met the full code test, which assesses whether prosecutions are in the public interest and if there is sufficient evidence. A West Midlands spokesperson said Vaughan-Spruce had made a civil claim for unlawful arrest, assault and a breach of human rights and it had settled the claim without any admission of liability.

This weekend, the ADF was sharing videos of Vaughan-Spruce outside an abortion clinic, being asked to move on by an officer and declining.

Father Sean Gough, a Catholic priest who faced charges – later dropped – claiming he intimidated service users near an abortion clinic, and Isabel Vaughan-Spruce, founder of the March for Life anti-abortion group Photograph: Jacob King/PA

The ADF also backed Father Sean Gough, a Catholic priest who faced charges claiming he intimidated service users near an abortion clinic, which were later dropped for the same reason as Vaughan-Spruce’s - and is supporting a fourth woman who is expected to appear in court next month over her alleged failure to pay a fixed penalty notice after she was accused of breaching a buffer zone.

The cases raise questions about the growing influence of US anti-abortion groups in Britain. The Observer previously reported that the UK branch of the ADF had more than doubled its spending since 2020 and been appointed a stakeholder in a parliamentary group on religious freedoms in a role that grants it direct access to MPs.

In all the cases, at the centre of the ADF’s publicity is the idea that silent prayer is being criminalised – and people’s right to freedom of religion is being eroded.


di  per "theguardian.com"

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