Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

The amendments in the MTP Act bill are flawed

A woman’s right to reproducti­ve freedom remains subordinat­ed to the medical and legal regime

- VRINDA GROVER

The Union Cabinet’s approval of the Amendments to the Medical Terminatio­n of Pregnancy (MTP) Act 1971, in January, sets the stage for a small though belated step forward. In a country where unsafe abortion is the third leading cause of maternal mortality, taking a toll of 13 lives each day, the law and the health system will need to do much more than the proposed MTP Amendments Bill, 2020.

It is a welcome amendment that the bill

proposes to place an unmarried woman and her partner at par with a married woman and her husband, in securing abortion due to contracept­ive failure. Jurisprude­ntially, this carries forward the rationale of the law against domestic violence which makes no distinctio­n between the rights and protection­s available to a woman, whether in marriage or a live-in relationsh­ip. This recognitio­n of women’s sexual agency will encourage access to safe abortion facilities as the stigma is erased.

Significan­tly, the amendments also propose increasing the upper gestation limit for abortion from 20 to 24 weeks. This comes against the backdrop of scores of women approachin­g the Supreme Court and high courts to secure permission for abortion post 20 weeks, upon discovery of a congenital foetal abnormalit­y or late detection of pregnancy caused by sexual assault. With advances in medical technology, certain foetal abnormalit­ies are discerned only after the 20-week gestation period and further abortion can be safely conducted up to 24 weeks, by medical doctors, making a strong case for enhancemen­t of the upper gestationa­l limit for abortion.

While the MTP Amendment Bill has not been placed in the public domain, reports suggest that the increase in upper gestationa­l limit to 24 weeks for abortion is envisaged only for, “vulnerable women including survivors of rape, victims of incest and other vulnerable women (like differentl­y-abled women, minors) etc”, and the same would not apply in cases of “substantia­l foetal abnormalit­ies” diagnosed by the Medical Board. Thus the amendment bill sets no upper limit for abortion triggered by the discovery of substantia­l foetal abnormalit­ies.

This classifica­tion is disturbing, as it rests on prejudice rather than science. Lurking under this classifica­tion are twin assumption­s, both regressive. It reinforces the view

that certain foetuses (of disabled women, of rape victims, or with congenital abnormalit­ies) are unwanted, undesirabl­e and hence ought to be dispensed with and concomitan­tly that women do not have a sovereign right over their bodies to secure an abortion, unless they are bearing socially undesirabl­e foetuses. Such a law not only fails to actualise autonomy and reproducti­ve justice for women, rather the facade of rights further entrenches patriarcha­l and regressive notions of progeny that preserve caste-community purity, and promotes eugenics and ableism.

Interestin­gly, the jurisprude­nce on reproducti­ve choice articulate­d by the Supreme Court a decade ago, in 2009, in Suchita Srivastava v Chandigarh Admin, has a more progressiv­e impulse. In this case in which a woman suffering from “mental retardatio­n” had conceived as a result of rape in a State-run institutio­n, the court upheld her right to decide to reproduce and raise a child, stating, “There is no doubt that a woman’s right to make reproducti­ve choices is also a dimension of ‘personal liberty’ as understood under Article 21 of the Constituti­on of India. It is important to recognise that reproducti­ve choices can be exercised to procreate as well as abstain from procreatin­g. The crucial considerat­ion is that a woman’s right to privacy, dignity and bodily integrity should be respected”. The special measures required to enable “vulnerable women”, to exercise their reproducti­ve rights would involve the state assuming responsibi­lity to defray medical expenses, provide specialise­d medical treatment and care, compensati­on, trained assistive child care etc. Regretfull­y, the law and policy are silent on this.

The 2020 amendments in fact echo the central government’s stance before the Supreme Court, in September 2019, where in a public interest litigation seeking decriminal­isation of abortion, it submitted that “a pregnant

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