Argentina moves closer to historic abortion legalisation [View all]
A pro-abortion movement, symbolized by a green handkerchief, has swept through Latin America, where abortion is punishable by law
Uki Goñi
Wed 9 Dec 2020 05.00 EST
Belén ended up in jail after suffering a spontaneous miscarriage. Unaware that she was pregnant, the 25-year-old went to seek medical care at a hospital in Argentinas northern province of Tucumán when she suffered abdominal pain.
In accordance with Argentinas stringent anti-abortion legislation, Belén (not her real name) was reported by the hospital to the authorities and sentenced to eight years in prison for homicide. She did not regain her freedom until almost three years later, in 2017, after a feminist lawyer who took up her case convinced the Tucumán supreme court to overturn her conviction.
There are many Beléns in Argentina and this madness will continue until abortion is legalized, said Ana Correa, pro-abortion campaigner and author of the book Somos Belén (We Are Belén).
That long-awaited moment may be about to arrive.
Argentina is expected to move one step away from becoming the first major Latin American nation to legalize abortion on Thursday, when the lower house of congress votes on a legal abortion bill sponsored by president Alberto Fernández. The president holds a majority in the lower house, and a government source said the senate could vote the move into law as soon as next week.
More:
https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2020/dec/09/argentina-legalize-abortion-bill-congress-vote