The Star Malaysia

Longoria: Abortion bans endanger women

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CANNES: Actress Eva Longoria says restrictiv­e abortion laws passed in the US states of Alabama and Missouri are a threat to women, as other stars staged a protest against the bans on the Cannes red carpet.

“What’s happening in Alabama is so important in the world,” the Desperate Housewives star said on Saturday, referring to the US state which has banned terminatio­ns even in the case of rape or incest.

“It’s going to affect everybody if we don’t pay attention.”

Longoria – a pro-choice Catholic – warned of a “domino effect” with a dozen other Republican-controlled US states seeking to restrict the rights of women to abortion.

Last year, the Latina actress produced the Netflix documentar­y Reversing Roe, which showed how pro-life groups are mounting a major push to overturn the landmark US Supreme Court decision that legalised abortion in 1973.

Her comments came as Spanish star Penelope Cruz joined a group of actresses led by Charlotte Gainsbourg, Rossi de Palma and French director Claire Denis in staging a red carpet protest for abortion rights.

The gathering was originally meant to support the Argentinia­n documentar­y Let It Be Law, which premiered on Saturday in the festival’s official selection.

It tells the story of the struggle for women’s rights in the huge, largely Catholic Latin American country, which has become bitterly divided over abortion.

At the protest, Argentinia­n prochoice activists created a “green wave” of women waving green handkerchi­efs, the symbol of Argentina’s pro-abortion movement.

One wore a striking green ballgown embroidere­d around the hem with a slogan in Spanish reading: “Legal, safe and free abortion.”

Spanish director Pedro Almodovar, whose film Pain & Glory starring Cruz and Antonio Banderas is an early favourite for the festival’s top prize, also brandished a green handkerchi­ef in a show of support.

Months of protests to decriminal­ise abortion in Pope Francis’ homeland culminated in a make-or-break Senate vote in February.

But on its eighth attempt, the law failed at the final hurdle when it was voted down by 38 votes to 31, bringing thousands onto the streets of Buenos Aires in protest.

“That night, I nearly died from the cold, from the rain, I almost broke my camera,” Juan Solanas, who directed the documentar­y, said.

“I felt anger and indignatio­n,” said the 52-year-old son of the celebrated filmmaker Fernando “Pino” Solanas, who won best director at Cannes for his 1988 film Sur.

“I grew up in an atheist family (and) I respect people’s beliefs, but it is medieval and violent to impose them on people who don’t think the same,” he added.

Solanas said restrictio­ns like those passed in Alabama and Missouri would lead to women’s deaths.

“In Argentina, one woman dies every week following an illegal abortion – more than one a day in Latin America, where 300 million women live without the right to end their pregnancie­s.”

Longoria, one of the founders of the Time’s Up movement that pushes for gender equality and women’s rights, told a Kering “Women in Motion” talk at Cannes on Friday that the group would likely get involved in next year’s US presidenti­al election.

“We’re trying to figure out what Time’s Up’s role in these elections is and how can we have an impact,” she said.

Despite the momentum generated after #MeToo, she said in the workplace, generally “the statistics are going the wrong way. We’re not improving.”

 ?? — Reuters ?? Speaking out: Longoria is a pro-choice Catholic.
— Reuters Speaking out: Longoria is a pro-choice Catholic.

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