Ah,autonomy. "Woman's right to choose". Activist judges. Creative accountancy. Etc.
A few rambling musings to myself. (Some others may[i, although I doubt it will be very many, want to consider the same questions and observations).
Does a woman have the right to choose an abortion eight weeks, or eight months into her pregnancy? Or eighty minutes before she gives birth?
Does her right to choose end [i]after] she has given birth? Or not? If the answer is yes, then that would be based presumably on the physical separation of mother and child, not on any concept of "dependency", wouldn't it, seeing how a new-born couldn't live an independent life?
Now take the religious angle. If you believe that the fertilised egg is endowed with a soul at the moment of conception as RCs do, or a hundred days later as I think Islam teaches, then, even if you think this soul stuff is superstitious nonsense, one must surely allow that opposition to abortion by people with those beliefs is based on the same moral principle which condemns murder. That does follow, doesn't it, VE?
Now forget religion and think scientifically and humanely: is there a point in its development when the foetus becomes a human being and it which it might suffer pain? I've had an Alfie experience (remember Michael Caine and lovely Vivien Merchant RIP in the film?) when my sister-in-law had a back-street abortion and spent a weekend with us. What was aborted was not a "thing", I can assure you. Being a typical bloke I wimped out and left the girls to deal with it.
Now, exceptional circumstances of the pregnancy. Most often cited are rape and incest. But, distressing as they are for the victim, they shouldn't override the moral case if there is one. Principle of "hard cases make for bad law".