Parliament should debate revising abortion rules after a woman was jailed, the chairman of the Commons’ equality committee has said.
Caroline Nokes MP told the BBC that the 1861 law used to prosecute Carla Foster, a mother of three, was “out of date”.
Activists urged reform after he received a 28-month sentence, 14 of which he will spend in custody.
Foster was between 32 and 34 weeks pregnant when she took medication acquired through the “pills by mail” scheme introduced during lockdown, the Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court heard.
Abortion is legal up to 24 weeks and the procedure must be done in a clinic after 10 weeks.
Foster was initially charged with destruction of children, which she denied, and later pleaded guilty to an offense under Section 58 of the Offenses Against the Person Act 1861: “administering drugs or using instruments to cause abortion.” .
Nokes, who chairs the House of Commons Women and Equality Committee, said MPs should “decide in the 21st century whether we should trust legislation that is centuries old.”
The Tory MP told BBC Radio 4’s World Tonight programme: “This is not something that has been discussed in great detail for many years.
“And cases like this, while tragic and, thankfully, very rare, show that we are relying on legislation that is seriously out of date. It is a case for Parliament to start looking at this issue in detail.”