Argentina legalises abortion in major shift for women’s rights
Argentina legalised elective abortion on Wednesday morning, marking a historic shift toward women’s rights in one of Latin America’s largest Catholic countries.
Argentina legalised elective abortion after an acrimonious internal debate, marking a historic shift toward women’s rights in one of Latin America’s largest Catholic countries.
The bill, approved by the Senate in a 38-29 vote after a debate that stretched into the early hours of Wednesday, gives women the right to voluntarily terminate a pregnancy until the 14th week. It is a victory for President Alberto Fernández, who had made its approval a key campaign pledge, and puts Argentina among the few countries in the region to allow the procedure.
The proposal, which had already passed in the lower house Chamber of Deputies by a wide margin on December 11, now heads to Fernández who’s expected to sign it into law. It is the latest sign of a sea change in the home country of Pope Francis: despite the opposition of the Catholic church and evangelical groups, the pro-abortion campaign received a groundswell of support from young Argentine women, who say lack of access to the medical procedure leads thousands to seek clandestine operations in unsanitary and dangerous conditions.
The bill’s approval also provided a boost to Fernandez’s political base at a time when Argentines are reeling from the pandemic and a prolonged economic crisis that’s eroding their purchasing power. Just as the Senate debated the abortion law Wednesday night, the lower house approved new rules that effectively mean pension benefits will grow below the rate of inflation, currently around 40 percent.
“The government is trying to show that despite everything going on, it can push through key social demands and close the year with a positive narrative,” said Mariano Machado, an analyst at the consulting firm Verisk Maplecroft in Buenos Aires. “The numbers, of course, tell the opposite story.”
Activists clad in green bandannas, which have become a symbol for the abortion rights movement in Argentina, celebrated in front of Congress in downtown Buenos Aires as the final results of the vote came in at 4am.
Fernández said last month that some 38,000 women are hospitalised every year due to medical malpractice in illegal abortions across the country. Previously, abortion was only legal in Argentina in cases of rape or if the mother’s health was at risk.
It’s the second time in as many years that the abortion issue has come to a vote in Argentina. A similar bill in 2018 passed through the lower house but narrowly failed in the Senate. Argentina joins Uruguay, Cuba and Guyana as the only countries in Latin America where elective abortions are legal. It’s also allowed in some parts of Mexico.
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