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Argentina allows elective abortion; Chile starts own debate on issue

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Argentina on Thursday became one of just a handful of Latin American countries to allow elective abortion, as neighboring Chile initiated its own debate on decriminalizing a procedure denied to most women on the continent.

LEGALIZING ABORTION. Argentina’s President Alberto Fernandez (center) is seen after promulgating the abortion law known as Voluntary Interruption of Pregnancy Law (IVE in Spanish) in Buenos Aires, on January 14, 2021. Fernandez sign the law that allows voluntary terminations up to 14 weeks of pregnancy, which was passed by the senate on December 30, 2020. AFP

President Alberto Fernandez signed a law that allows abortion until 14 weeks of pregnancy that was passed by the Senate on December 30.

“Today we have a better, more equal society,” said Fernandez, speaking from an event at a museum in the capital Buenos Aires.

“This is a great step towards equal rights, giving women the possibility to decide.”

Fernandez added the it was “the culmination of a long struggle” waged by those wanting an end to abortion being “a crime that obliges secrecy and exposure to the risks involved” in back street procedures.

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The government estimates that since 1983 more than 3,000 women have died from up to more than half a million secret abortions carried out in the country of 44 million.

Congress passed the bill last month, backed by women’s rights proponents, despite strong opposition from Evangelical Christians and traditional Roman Catholics and disapproval voiced by Pope Francis.

As a result, Argentina becomes the largest of just four Latin American countries where women can choose to have an abortion, joining Cuba, Uruguay and Guyana.

In Mexico, terminations are allowed only in the state of Oaxaca and in Mexico City.

The region has some of the world’s most restrictive abortion laws. In El Salvador, Honduras and Nicaragua, the procedure is banned, and women can be sent to jail even for having a miscarriage.

In Argentina, terminations were allowed only if the pregnancy was the result of rape or endangered the woman’s life.

Between 2012 and 2020, more than 1,500 court cases were brought for abortions, according to the Center for Legal and Social Studies.

The law “represents the state’s understanding what reproductive autonomy signifies to women,” Maria Teresa Bosio, the president of a group of Catholics in favor of the right to choose, told AFP.

The law allows for health care workers to express conscientious objection, but states that the abortion must be provided free of charge within 10 days of a request.

State guarantees

Fernandez also promulgated a 1,000-day guarantee that women will receive state aid during pregnancy and for their child’s first three years.

“There will be a state behind (women) that will give them health care and guarantees so that their child can grow and develop,” said Fernandez.

Chile also currently restricts abortion to cases of rape or when a woman’s life is endangered, along with unviability of the fetus. Until as recently as 2017, the country banned the procedure outright.

Women there took to the streets of Santiago on Wednesday to demand access to abortion as debate opened in Chile’s Congress on a bill seeking to allow elective abortion until 14 weeks of pregnancy.

The protesters sported green neck scarves like the ones worn by their counterparts in Argentina and elsewhere in Latin America rallying for women’s reproductive rights.

The women also performed “A Rapist in your Path,” a song that has become a global anthem against sexual violence.

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