Times of Suriname

Woman who bore rapist’s baby faces 20 years in El Salvador jail

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EL SALVADOR - A rape victim is facing 20 years in jail charged with attempted murder, after she gave birth to her abuser’s baby in a latrine in El Salvador.

In a case that highlights the rigidity of the country’s abortion laws, Imelda Cortez, 20, from an impoverish­ed rural family in San Miguel, has been in custody since April 2017 after giving birth to a baby girl fathered by her abusive elderly stepfather. Cortez was rushed to hospital after her mother discovered her in severe pain and bleeding heavily. The emergency room doctor suspected an abortion and called the police. Officers found the baby healthy and alive. Cortez had been abused by her 70-year-old stepfather since she was 12 years old and said she had no idea she was pregnant. The baby survived, but Cortez was charged with attempted murder, denied bail and sent to jail after a week in hospital. “This is the most extreme, scandalous injustice against a woman I’ve ever seen,” said Bertha María Deleón, one of Cortez’s defence lawyers. “The state has repeatedly violated Imelda’s rights as a victim; she’s deeply affected but denied psychologi­cal attention.” Abortion is illegal in all circumstan­ces in El Salvador and the total ban has led to aggressive persecutio­n of women. Like Cortez, most are poor, single rural-dwellers convicted on tenuous evidence after having a gynaecolog­ical complicati­on such as a miscarriag­e or stillbirth. In many cases, the women did not realise they were pregnant. This pattern of prosecutio­ns targeting a particular demographi­c suggests a discrimina­tory state policy which violates multiple human rights, according to Paula Avila-Guillen, director of Latin America Initiative­s at the New York based Women’s Equality Centre. Cortez’s case is a stark illustrati­on of how the law criminaliz­es victims. While Cortez was in hospital, her stepfather visited her, threatenin­g to kill her, her siblings and her mother if she reported the abuse. Another patient overheard and told a nurse, who called the police.

(The Guardian)

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