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Simone Veil, Auschwitz survivor and abortion pioneer, dies aged 89 | Simone Veil, Auschwitz survivor and abortion pioneer, dies aged 89 |
(35 minutes later) | |
Simone Veil, an Auschwitz survivor who played a leading role in legalising contraception and abortion in France, has died aged 89. | Simone Veil, an Auschwitz survivor who played a leading role in legalising contraception and abortion in France, has died aged 89. |
Veil, an icon of French politics and the first president of the European parliament, died at home, her son Jean said. | |
In 1973, she pushed through laws to liberalise contraception, with the pill not only authorised but reimbursed by the social security system. | In 1973, she pushed through laws to liberalise contraception, with the pill not only authorised but reimbursed by the social security system. |
A year later she led the charge in the national assembly for the legalisation of abortion, where she braved a volley of insults, some of them likening terminations to the Nazis’ treatment of Jews. | A year later she led the charge in the national assembly for the legalisation of abortion, where she braved a volley of insults, some of them likening terminations to the Nazis’ treatment of Jews. |
The legislation, the Loi Veil (Veil law), is considered a cornerstone of women’s rights and secularism in France. | |
A staunch pro-European, Veil was elected to the European parliament in 1979, becoming the first president of the assembly. After a second term as health minister under the Socialist president François Mitterrand, Veil last held major public office between 1998 and 2007, when she was a member of the constitutional council. | |
Expressing his condolences on Friday, the French president, Emmanuel Macron, tweeted: “May her example inspire our fellow citizens as the best of what France can achieve.” | |
His predecessor François Hollande said Veil “embodied dignity, courage and moral rectitude”. | |
The prime minister, Édouard Philippe, tweeted: “France has lost a figure the likes of which history produces few,.” | |
Born Simone Jacob in Nice, Veil was deported to the Nazi death camp at 17 with her entire family. | |
Her father and brother were last seen on a train to Lithuania and her mother, Yvonne, died in Belsen just before that camp was liberated in 1945. | Her father and brother were last seen on a train to Lithuania and her mother, Yvonne, died in Belsen just before that camp was liberated in 1945. |
Veil and her two sisters, one of whom later died in a car crash, were among only 11 survivors of 400 Jewish children deported from her region. | |
She later said it was her experiences in the Nazi concentration camps that made her a firm believer in the unification of Europe. | She later said it was her experiences in the Nazi concentration camps that made her a firm believer in the unification of Europe. |
“Sixty years later I am still haunted by the images, the odours, the cries, the humiliation, the blows and the sky filled with the smoke of the crematoriums,” Veil said in a TV interview broadcast in 2005. | “Sixty years later I am still haunted by the images, the odours, the cries, the humiliation, the blows and the sky filled with the smoke of the crematoriums,” Veil said in a TV interview broadcast in 2005. |