Beatriz Trial in Inter-American Court Defies Total Abortion Ban in El Salvador
Wednesday, April 26, 2023
María Luz Nóchez
On March 22 and 23, the debate over El Salvador's restrictive abortion laws relocated to the Inter-American Court of Human Rights in San Jose, Costa Rica. The defendant, the state of El Salvador, had to explain what happened in 2013 when Beatriz, a young woman who was suffering from lupus erythematosus and pregnant with a fetus diagnosed with anencephaly lacking a brain was denied a therapeutic abortion despite her doctors medical opinion that she needed one.
Beatriz had given birth before, and her first pregnancy had also put her life at risk. But this time, when she was 19 weeks pregnant, the hospitals medical committee believed that carrying the pregnancy to term could cause severe damage to Beatrizs body and health and concluded that the pregnancy should be terminated. But El Salvadors government and justice system would not allow it. Moreover, its arguments at the IACHR demonstrated that the Salvadoran state is proud of how it handled the situation.
The lawsuit contends that denying Beatriz access to an abortion irreversibly harmed her physical and mental health. Beatriz was 22 years old at the time. On Wednesday, her mother, who witnessed Beatrizs pregnancy ten years ago and heard her daughter ask for something to be done to prevent other women from suffering a similar fate, testified about her own indignation at the time and ever since: Why did they put her through that torture when she was in the hospital every day for her treatment?
In a trial that featured doctors and international experts, Beatriz's mother's testimony linked pregnant womens mental health and Salvadoran womens economic situation to the debate over the countrys current terminal ban on abortions. In San José in late March, a discussion frequently centering individual political beliefs focused instead on a specific case: the experience of a woman whose last name was withheld to protect the entire familys privacy and safety. Beatriz lived in Jiquilisco, a fishing municipality, where she worked on a farm with her parents as a child before becoming a domestic worker as a teenager. In the final years of her life, she was a tortilla maker despite the fact that, her mother said, Beatrizs hands and feet had begun to deform. My daughter was a strong woman, she recalled in her testimony.
More:
https://elfaro.net/en/202304/el_salvador/26823/Beatriz-Trial-in-Inter-American-Court-Defies-Total-Abortion-Ban-in-El-Salvador.htm