A Clandestine Service Is Never Safe: Women fight for abortion rights in Argentina
The case of a girl in Argentina being raped and then refused the morning after pill has reignited the debate on abortion in this strongly Catholic country.
By Ana Caistor-Arendar on Thursday, February 19th, 2009 - 703 words.
Seventeen-year-old N (as she is known for legal reasons) was a student in San Pedro, a town in the North of Argentina. One night last summer, while on her way home, she was brutally beaten and raped repeatedly for several hours. Due to the severity of her injuries she remained in hospital for a week.
Yet the horror didn’t stop there. Despite the nature of the sexual attack the hospital refused to administer her with the morning after pill (MAP). When she eventually returned home, N discovered that she was pregnant.
“We petitioned the hospital for an abortion,” explains Mariana Vargas, N’s lawyer. “By law they should have given her the MAP, and as they didn’t comply with this they had the obligation to grant her an abortion.”
Vargas’ efforts to push for an abortion through legal means failed. The case gained nation-wide media coverage and a campaign was launched to raise money for N to undergo a safe (though still illegal) abortion.
In the weeks that followed, N’s mother informed the press that her daughter had suffered a miscarriage.
In Argentina, like in much of the rest of Latin America, abortion is illegal and punishable by imprisonment. Nevertheless, around 500,000 illegal abortions are carried out in the country every year. These abortions lead to an estimated 400 deaths per year, while a further 80,000 women are hospitalized due to post-abortion complications.
Unsafe abortion is the number one cause of maternal mortality in Argentina and high profile cases, like that of N, are opening up the debate in a country that for many years refused to acknowledge it.
Cases like this one also illustrate the extent to which abortion is a class issue here, a country where 30 percent of the population live below the poverty line.
“It is clear that this is an issue that most affects poor, young women in society,” says Giselle Carino, Regional Program Officer for Safe Abortion from the International Planned Parenthood Foundation. “Women who have more economic resources have much better access to an illegal but safe abortion; often it is their family doctor who will arrange it.”
Middle and upper class circles know that an unwanted pregnancy can be taken care of safely and speedily, at a cost of around $1,500-$2,000. “Women who can’t afford to get an abortion this way use their own methods which put their lives at great risk,” explains Carino. “From taking large amounts of herbs, to using clothes hangers or sharp objects which they insert into their uterus.”
Yet Carino insists that it would be wrong to assume that women with the money to pay for a safe abortion don’t also suffer as a result of its criminalization.
“The reality is that it is still a clandestine service and by its very definition a clandestine service is never safe because the woman is denied all rights and it is unregulated,” Carino says.
With one unsafe abortion carried out for every baby born in Argentina, the restrictive laws are clearly not working; so why are they still implemented?
“The current situation in relation to abortion in this country has a lot to do with the strength of the Catholic Church here,” says Vargas. “They promote deeply conservative views about a woman’s role in society as mother.”
The Catholic Church remains a powerful force in Argentina, Roman Catholics make up 92 percent of the population, and the Church enjoys significant sway in government.
Yet opinion polls suggest that the publics view of abortion is changing. A recent study revealed that 62 percent of those interviewed were in favor of the decriminalization of abortion and 37 percent were in favor of the total legalisation of abortion.
The Church has reacted by attempting to rally the public behind their pro-life message. The archbishop of Buenos Aires, cardinal Jorge Bergoglio, recently called on Christians to vociferously oppose abortion, even when accused of being “antiquated, sanctimonious, zealots.”
Nevertheless, it appears that the debate has expanded in Argentina. “There is now more awareness of the problem,” says Carino. “It’s no longer a debate of the church versus feminist organizations, it is now a public debate. The criminalization of abortion violates the human rights of all women as it limits their capacity to make their own decisions about their bodies, lives and plans for the future.”
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Ana Caistor-Arendar
Ana graduated from the University of the Arts in Photography. She was the co-founder of independent magazine, Bulb, and has since been working as a freelance journalist in Latin America. She is currently at the LSE studying International Relations masters.
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Ah, my Home And Native Land; we Canadians resolved this Neanderthal debate years ago by deciding that it was a Canadian woman's right to choose and a private matter between herself, her physician and the God of her understanding. Vivre la libertée!
Nuts that Argentina still bans it
Not nuts, normal.
Latin America is so fucking contradictory and ancient (I mean colonial style ancient.) The Catholic Church has reaped untold harm upon these societies because of their moral intransigence. This issue, among others of moral import, and other things like the embargo on Cuba, are so fucking backwards and dated, even from the perspective of Latin America.
Class rules the world. The Golden Rule, ya know, he with the gold makes the rules, or in this cases flouts them.
Chile is even worse because the society is so small that the conservative elites have an even greater control over business and public policy. On the morning after pill, there were even cases in which pharmacies were going against government policy which allowed its use.
" Nevertheless, around 500,000 illegal abortions are carried out in the country every year. These abortions lead to an estimated 400 deaths per year." Er, um, you mean 500,400 deaths per year.
In Britain, it is legal to terminate a foetus even at 9 months if it has some "defect" like a club foot or cleft palate, both of which are treatable conditions. So does that mean that Britain, unlike Argentina, is a "humane country" which respects the rights of women? The woman who was raped and who I admit should have received a MAP is one part of the picture, and that little one which is being killed simply because it has a cleft palate is another part of the SAME piture. Do keep your eyes on both parts.
Is the foetus really a part of a woman's body? Does it not have its own DNA? Of course it cannot survive on its own, but neither can many patients in our hospitals. Is it OK to kill these patients if, say their medical bills exceed some limits?
http://angryforareason.blogspot.com/2006/02/how-t…
use this for women that cant get abortions legally. it might help