Vatic Note: This is what your new world order will look like if it goes through. Its obscene and will never be accepted by this country and that is where it will come if this goes through there. Remember Eastern Europe is now fully under control of the Rothschild Satanists. From a previous article about Hungary we learned they are on the verge of extinction after all the horrors done to them and it will be 600,000 years before anyone can occupy that land again. This is their new world, and how they see taking care of us...... destroying every ounce of freedom regarding our own bodies, the land, water and air, that they can do. To day, that means food, we have no choices there, its GM or nothing, Sterility/fertility, without our permission, now home birthing which has always been a womans right. So much more... we are finally being treated like the cattle they think we are. Notice that normally, whatever is happening in Europe eventually ends up over here and that is why this is up and so important. Poor Hungarians are under attack from all sides as we saw from the earlier post on their life threatening spill in the Danube River. This is what a "ROTHSCHILD IN TOTAL CONTROL LOOKS LIKE". Forget it.
Hungary: Midwife Agnes Gereb taken to court for championing home births
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/oct/22/hungary-midwife-agnes-gereb-home-birth
Amelia Hill, guardian.co.uk, Friday 22 October 2010 19.29 BST
Provided to Vatic Project by Flaming Gypsy, Australia
Gynaecologist faces five years in Hungarian prison, prompting protests over authorities' hardline childbirth policy
Agnes Gereb, who has been sentenced for five years in prison for assisting home births. Photograph: Family pictures
The following correction was printed in the Guardian's Corrections and clarifications column, Wednesday 27 October 2010
Wendy Savage was described in an article as Britain's first female obstetric consultant. She asks us to make clear that this is not the case.
Twenty minutes after the expectant mother went into labour, the police were knocking at the door. While mother and child were taken to hospital and treated well, the midwife at the birthing centre was thrown in jail. Dr Agnes Gereb is now being kept in maximum security conditions in a Budapest prison, facing a five-year prison sentence.
Gereb, founder of the Napvilág birthing centre, is a highly experienced gynaecologist, midwife and internationally recognised home birth expert. She has successfully helped deliver 3,500 babies at home. But her reputation means nothing to the authorities in Hungary, a country that has, campaigners say, relentlessly pushed to criminalise home births and make hospital deliveries compulsory.
In the hours after her arrest on 5 October, Gereb was subjected to intense interrogation before being called to a closed court at 10pm. Held for a further week without charge, she finally appeared in an open court on 12 October, shackled in leg chains and handcuffs, accused of negligent malpractice. She also faces several other charges, including one for manslaughter relating to an earlier home birth when a baby died after a difficult labour.
Gereb's is the story of home birthing in modern Hungary and has sparked international outrage. A hero to women across Hungary, she has dedicated the past 30 years to defending the right of mothers to choose their birthing experience.
Her arrest is, say her supporters, the "logical climax of [the state's] campaign of vilification and criminalisation" of those who support a mother's right to have a non-hospital birth.
Support for her plight is growing, with backers including Sheila Kitzinger, the British natural childbirth activist and author, Professor Wendy Savage, Britain's first female obstetric consultant, and the Labour MP Caroline Flint.
The constitution in Hungary gives a mother the right to give birth at home but prevents her doing so by arguing that the practical conditions to ensure a safe home birth do not exist: a situation created by the refusal of the ANTSZ, Hungary's public health authority, to issue licences to independent midwives, and the failure of successive governments to implement regulations compelling them to do so.
Women wanting to give birth at home, therefore, find themselves in an unlicensed and unregulated hinterland. Any midwife who gives medical assistance is breaking the law. In the last five years, police investigations have become increasingly aggressive. There are just 15 midwives in Hungary who will help women give birth at home. Five of these currently face lengthy prison sentences.
"The state's campaign against home births has lasted nearly 20 years and is rooted in the determination of a clique of obstetricians to maintain their own power and earning potential from hospital births," said Donal Kerry, spokesman for the Hungarian Homebirth Community.
Obstetrics is one of the most lucrative branches of Hungary's supposedly free healthcare system, explains Kerry, in which parents expect to pay up to a month's salary to the doctor, who is legally obliged to be present at each birth.
Obstetric care in Hungary is, by many measures, excellent. It is tightly run by skilled doctors, with low mortality rates. The problem, say campaigners, is that hospital births are doctor-centred and highly interventionist. Inductions and episiotomies are standard.
Mirtill Rackevei gave birth to her three daughters at home between 2002 and 2006, with Gereb's help. "I decided to have home births because I had seen my sister have a child in hospital and it was awful," she said. "My sister was reluctant to have any more children because of her traumatic experience but my home births were so lovely that she decided to try it," she added. "The difference for her was so great that she went on to have third and fourth children, also at home. So now she has three children in the world who would not exist were it not for Agi. Agi is a wonderful woman."
In addition to the most recent case, Gereb is facing four other criminal charges. Two involved births where postpartum haemorrhage was greater than normal – a fairly common occurence in obstetrical practice. In both cases, the mothers and babies were discharged from hospital after a few hours. The other two cases are more serious: one concerning an infant who died as a result of shoulder dystocia and the other a twin who suffered a lack of oxygen at birth and died seven months later. Only the parents of the child who died from shoulder dystocia are pressing charges. The others all support Gereb.
Tamas Fazekas, one of a team of lawyers fighting Gereb's cause with the Hungarian civil liberties union, says she is confined to her four-woman cell for 23 hours a day. "She is subjected to strip searches, only allowed to see her family once a month — they have not been allowed to visit her since her arrest — and can have just one 10-minute phone call every week. When she appeared before the public court she was in handcuffs and leg shackles so tight that she had a 10cm bleeding wound on her leg," he said. The day after Gareb was arrested, more than 600 people protested outside Budapest's remand prison. Two days later, more than 2,000 people made a human chain from the municipal court to the national parliament.
Campaigners have asked the Hungarian constitutional court and the European court of human rights to force the Hungarian government to draw up necessary regulations without further delay.
European choice Variation in home births by country
United Kingdom: around 3%
Choice in maternity care is promoted by the NHS. Between 2006 and 2007 the number of home births rose by 10%.
Republic of Ireland: less than 1%
A bill expected to become law next month makes it illegal for midwives to assist home births unless fully insured; those attending births outside certain criteria risk a fine of up to €160,000 and 10 years' imprisonment.
France: just over 1%
Although home births are legal, insurance does not cover midwives. Their association is trying to ban one midwife specialising in home births, for being uninsured, which may set a wider precedent.
Netherlands: around 33%
Home birth is a popular choice among women whose pregnancies are considered low risk.
Poland: around 300 instances a year
This month the health minister signed a protocol to limit excessive medicalisation of childbirth.
Germany: around 2%
Homebirth is legal but last June insurance for midwives rose in price, making it too costly for many.
Czech Republic: 100 instances a year
Thereis no law prohibiting birth at home but it is not recommended.
Figures: Guardian research department
The article is reproduced in accordance with Section 107 of title 17 of the Copyright Law of the United States relating to fair-use and is for the purposes of criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.
"It is the greatest of all mistakes to do nothing because you can only do a little." ~ Sydney Smith
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1 comment:
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Be respectful in your comments, keeping in mind that these discussions will become the Zeitgeist of our time that future database archeologists will discover. Make your comments worthy and on the founding father's level in their respectfulness, reasoning, and sound argumentation. Prove we weren't all idiots in our day and age. Comments that advocate sedition or violence are not encouraged. Racist, ad hominem, and troll-baiting comments might never see the light of day.
Dear Vatic!
ReplyDeleteI'm glad that someone sees our situation - almost - clear.
Still, you do it better than most of my compatriots (being in a situation makes it harder to see it clear and objective).
For further understanding, I ask you to read these:
Carpathian Basin was never a part of Kazar Empire.
Carpathian Basin was always the home of Hungarians - oldest founding is 7000 years old, Tatarlaka tablet.
True, that they travelled to other lands and returned many times.
True, that once - during one of those journeys - they lived on a land part of the Kazarian Empire.
A Kazarian tribe (Kabars) joined to Hungarians when they returned to the Carpathian Basin around 850 BC.
This is the connection between the two peoples (a Kazarian tribe moved to our land and they were welcomed).
True, that our homeland was always an impact point of peoples fighting against each other and against us.
We never tried to conquer any land with violence - whom joined us did it by their free will.
The past thousand years in our history - which we know well - was about how others tried to oppress us.
First, our own king, Stephen made and end to our ancient christianity (which's principle is love and equality - the opposite of new world order's) and let roman catholic priests and power in the country.
Then, when they dig their toes in, foreing kings started to rule over us.
Then came the Turkish oppression, the Habsburgs, Trianon, the Russians, now the Cionists
(http://vaticproject.blogspot.com/2010/10/hungary-is-failed-state-over-extinct.html - attention: although every cionists are Jews but not every Jews are cionists)
- pardon, they were behind the scene at least from the Habsburgs.
As you see, we suffered a lot, but always survived.
Give us the chance, at least in theory, that we can do it again :)
You see it absolutely right, that they try to exterminate us with all possible methods.
One of these is to take away women's chance to have a happy childbirth - be it either in hospital or at home.
This is why they try to threaten all midwives, homebirthing parents through Gereb's misery.
Just countinue watching the events and pray for us.
Thank you, in the name of all of my compatriots:
Panni Povisel-Tresó, learning midwife, Hungary
(a strong, healthy, realistic and optimistic mother, who could move aboard to make a career but stays here to strengthen her people and home)