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MaltaToday 15 July 2026 MIDWEEK

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THERE is an old Shakespear- ean lesson that guilt often reveals itself not in silence but in protest. As Queen Gertrude famously remarks in Hamlet, "the lady doth protest too much, methinks." Whether or not one agrees with the court's judgment regarding Andrea Prudente, the speed and intensity with which the pro-choice lobby rushed to denounce it are, at the very least, worth noticing. After the Maltese court dismissed Andrea Prudente's constitutional case, one sentence in the judgment clearly struck a nerve—the court's observation that Prudente had been "used" by pro-choice activists to further their legal and political agenda. The reaction was immediate, angry, and telling. Voice for Choice described the judgment as a "stain on women's rights" and called the court's comments "deeply patronising", insisting that to say Prudente was "used" is to strip her of agen- cy and autonomy. Doctors for Choice echoed the same outrage, saying the pro-choice movement would not be silenced. But this response misses the most uncomfortable point. To say that a person has been used does not mean that she is unintelligent. It does not mean that she had no will, no voice, no suffering, no dignity. It means that her suffering may have been taken up, framed, amplified, or deployed by others for purposes larger than her own immediate pain. And that is precisely what needs to be examined. Andrea Prudente was undoubt- edly a woman in distress. She was frightened, vulnerable, and caught in a traumatic situation far from home. That fact should not be mocked, dismissed, or minimised. But neither should her suffering be turned into a political instrument while every- one pretends that this is simply compassion. The court found that her fundamental rights were not breached, that she in fact re- ceived appropriate medical care, and that medical evidence did not show she was in imminent danger of death while in Malta. Yet the public narrative built around her case often suggested something much simpler and far more dramatic—Malta had nearly killed a woman because of its pro-life laws. That narrative travelled quick- ly. It was powerful. It was emo- tionally effective. It also became useful. This is where the pro-choice reaction becomes so reveal- ing. Instead of pausing to ask whether a vulnerable woman's fear had been intensified by ideological voices around her, the movement rushed to defend itself. Instead of asking whether Andrea's pain had been absorbed into a campaign, they accused the court of insulting her intelli- gence. But the issue is not Andrea's intelligence. The issue is the movement's opportunism. Every salesman insists the customer made a free choice. That is not the same thing as saying no one was being sold anything. In fact, the finest manipulation in history has always been practised upon people convinced they were acting entirely of their own accord. To top it all, the rhetoric used after the judgment by the pro- choice lobby was not sober. It was not reflective. It was not even especially compassionate. It was furious, ideological, and predictable. Words like "oppres- sion", "misogyny", and "degrad- ing treatment" were thrown around as though repetition could substitute for reflection. Where was the humility? Where was the acknowledgment that a suffering woman may have become the face of a cause before she had even had the space to heal? Where was the concern that Andrea Prudente, the person, had become Andrea Prudente, the symbol? Before she had recovered from her ordeal, she had already been cast in someone else's script. In- deed, somewhere along the way, Andrea Prudente ceased to be simply a frightened woman and became a character in a national morality play. This is the quiet dehumanisa- tion we rarely name. Because a human being can be dehumanised not only by being ignored, but also by being overused. A person can be re- duced not only by silence, but by slogans. A woman's suffering can be exploited even by those who claim to speak in her name. The pro-choice lobby says it defended Andrea's voice. But one may ask: Did it defend her, or did it defend the usefulness of her story? There is a difference. True compassion does not rush to turn pain into a press release. And yes, there was an unborn child here too. That child has almost disappeared from the conversation. In much of the public commentary, the baby is treated as a medical complica- tion, an obstacle, a problem to be solved. Yet any serious moral discussion must be capable of holding both realities together— the suffering mother and the life of the child. This is what Malta's pro-life coalition so adamantly did from the very get-go. From day one, Malta's pro- life coalition argued that this was never a choice between mother and child, but a call to save both whenever medically possible; a position echoed by numerous doctors throughout the case. That same conviction drew thousands to Valletta on 4 December 2023. Today, more than ever, one thing is clear—Andrea Pruden- te deserved care. She did not deserve to be used. And neither does the Maltese public deserve to be emotionally blackmailed into mistaking ideology for mercy. 9 maltatoday | WEDNESDAY • 15 JULY 2026 OPINION Andrea Prudente deserved better Mariana Debono Philosophy PhD candidate, poet and writer Where was the humility? Where was the acknowledgment that a suffering woman may have become the face of a cause before she had even had the space to heal? Where was the concern that Andrea Prudente, the person, had become Andrea Prudente, the symbol? Andrea Prudente recovering in a Spanish hospital where she had the life-saving abortion after being denied a termination of pregnancy at Mater Dei Hospital

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