Perfil (Sabado)

Abortion campaigner­s vow to continue fight despite loss in Senate

Government may include a provision to decriminal­ise abortion when it moves to overhaul penal code later this month.

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Advocates for free, legal and safe abortion in Argentina – and campaigner­s across the continent – this week vowed to keep up the pressureon­lawmakersa­ndcontinue their fight to end clandestin­e abortions, despite the defeat of bill to legalise the procedure this week in the Senate.

The sponsors of the legislatio­n, which passed the lower house Chamber of Deputies in June, also said they were considerin­g new routes toward decriminal­ising abortion, as the fall-out from Thursday’s marathon-length session in the upper chamber settled. NGOs too said they would continue to press lawmakers and the government on the issue.

Inaninterv­iewwiththe Times, Amnesty Internatio­nal’s Lucila Galkin said senators had missed “an historic opportunit­y” by de- ciding to reject the legislatio­n, though she said the NGO was “hopeful that sooner or later this will become a reality.”

Declaring “there is no going back,” Galkin, Amnesty’s local coordinato­r of human rights and youth education, said the tide had turned.

“There will be more campaigns, more political science and more litigation: there are many ways in which we will channel our efforts. The vote was a setback but sooner or later we will prevail,” she said.

Cambiemos (Let’s Change) lawmaker Daniel Lipovetzky, who was in charge of the debate in the Chamber of Deputies, said the government should call a referendum, in wake of the heavy turnout by the green ‘prochoice’ camp on the streets.

“We propose a binding referendum, which is a mechanism provided for in the Constituti­on, which is a matter for the legislativ­e branch, not for the Executive,” Lipovetzky said.

Just hours earlier, Cabinet ChiefMarco­sPeñahadru­ledout the chances of a holding a public consultati­on on the issue, saying “we do not believe that a referendum is an option, parliament­ary debate was chosen.”

Local reports, however, said the government might move to decriminal­ise abortions following the wave of demonstrat­ions by feminist groups that helped to push the legislatio­n before Congress.

According to a survey carried out by the University of San Andrés in July, 28 percent of citizens strongly agreed with moves to legalise abortion. Seventeen percent said they “somewhat agree,” with 13 percent disagreein­g and 36 percent strongly against.

Argentina now allows abortion only in cases of rape, if the foetus is disabled or for risks to a woman’s health. Activists say 3,000 women have died of illegal abortions since 1983. Opponents, meanwhile, insist life beginsatco­nceptionan­dcomplain the bill could force doctors to perform the procedure.

The issue has bitterly divided Argentines, pitting conservati­ve doctors and the Roman Catholic Church against feminist groups and medical profession­als.

According to estimates from NGOs, around 500,000 clandestin­e abortions are carried out in Argentina each year and approximat­ely a hundred women die each year. Activists estimate 3,030 women have died of illegal abortions since 1983.

GREEN V BLUE

Senators debated for more than 15 hours on Wednesday and Thursday before voting 3831 in the early hours against the measure, which would have allowed abortion in the first 14 weeks of pregnancy. There were two abstention­s and one lawmaker was absent.

Anti-abortion campaigner­s and religious groups celebrated blocking the legislatio­n, which had already passed the lower house Chamber of Deputies in June. The Catholic Church and others, including some physicians groups, had strongly opposed the legislatio­n, arguing it would violate the Constituti­on.

“It’s not about religious beliefs but about a humanitari­an reason,” Cardinal Mario Poli, the archbishop­ofBuenosAi­res,told churchgoer­s at a “Mass for Life” held Wednesday night during the Senate debate. “Caring for life is the first human right and the duty of the state.”

Pope Francis this year denounced abortion as the “white glove”equivalent­oftheNazi-era eugenics programme and urged families “to accept the children that God gives them.”

Despite the loss, the grassroots movement behind the legislatio­n remained upbeat as the week closed, after coming closer than ever to expanding women’s reproducti­ve rights.

“We were sad that abortion will continue to be clandestin­e in Argentina and will produce more deaths, but we left happy and proud of the fight that we’re carrying through,” said Marina Cardelli, a member of the Feminist Wave group. “We won because we looked at each other eye-to-eye and we realized how strong we are, and that abortion will eventually be legal.”

President Mauricio Macri, who had promised to sign the legislatio­n if it passed Congress even though he has stated he is “in favour of life,” said after the vote that the debate would continue.

“We’ve shown that we have maturedasa­society,andthatwe can debate with the depth and seriousnes­s that all Argentines expected ... and democracy won,” Macri said.

A legalisati­on bill cannot be debated again until the next legislativ­e year, but Macri’s government is expected to include a provision to decriminal­ise abortion on August 21 when it overhauls the penal code. Although that would not legalise the practice, it is seen as a compromise solution.

In recent years, Argentina has been at the forefront of social movements in the region. In 2010, it became the first country in Latin America to legalise same-sex marriage. More recently, the Ni Una Menos movement highlighti­ng violence against women has grown into a global phenomenon.

“Fortunatel­y, women are gaining spaces and we’ve been learning from those spaces that they’re demanding,” said Gustavo Bayley, a tattoo artist wearing the abortion movement’s green handkerchi­ef on his arm. “It’s the beginning of revolution­s.”

The National Campaign for the Right to Legal, Safe and Free Abortion, one of the main groups behind the battle to tackle clandestin­e abortions, has not yet announced what its strategy will be, but reperesent­atives for the group said Wednesday night that the battle was not over.

“If it is not law now, it will be next year. We are going to continue fighting,” declared one the group’s representa­tives, lawyer Nelly Minyersky, at a press conference.

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 ?? AFP/ EITAN ABRAMOVICH ?? Pro-choice campaigner­s embrace after the result of the Senate vote became known.
AFP/ EITAN ABRAMOVICH Pro-choice campaigner­s embrace after the result of the Senate vote became known.
 ?? AP/ LUISA BALAGUER ?? Anti-abortion campaigner­s celebrate the result of the Senate vote, early Thursday morning.
AP/ LUISA BALAGUER Anti-abortion campaigner­s celebrate the result of the Senate vote, early Thursday morning.

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