Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Girl’s rape an abortion rallying cry

In Venezuela, the accused is free but not a child’s helper

- By Julie Turkewitz and Isayen Herrera

MERIDA, Venezuela — She wore a ponytail and a red T-shirt, the words “Glitter Girl” sketched across the front.

Gripping her mother’s hand, she spoke softly, describing how she had been forced out of school by Venezuela’s economic crisis, and then was raped at least six times by a neighborho­od predator who threatened to harm her family if she spoke out. At just 13, she became pregnant.

With her mother, she sought out a doctor, who told her the pregnancy endangered her life, and then a former teacher, who provided pills that induced an abortion.

But ending a pregnancy is illegal in almost all circumstan­ces in Venezuela. And now the girl was speaking up, she said, because her teacher, Vannesa Rosales, was in jail, facing more than a decade in prison for helping her end a pregnancy — while the accused rapist remained free.

“Every day I pray to God that she is released, that there is justice and that they lock him up,” the girl told The New York Times.

In Venezuela, the case, made public in local and internatio­nal press earlier this year, has become a point of outrage for women’s rights activists, who say it demonstrat­es the way the country’s economic and humanitari­an crisis has stripped away protection­s for young women and girls.

The Times is not identifyin­g the girl because she is a minor.

The country’s decline, presided over by President Nicolás Maduro and exacerbate­d by U.S. sanctions, has crippled schools, shuttered community programs, sent millions of parents abroad and eviscerate­d the justice system, leaving many vulnerable to violent actors who flourish amid impunity.

But the girl’s assault, and Rosales’ arrest, has also become a rallying cry for activists who say it is time for Venezuela to have a serious discussion about further legalizing abortion, an issue, they argue, that is now more important than ever.

The crisis has curtailed access to birth control, gutted maternity wards and created widespread hunger, often trapping women between the functions of their bodies and the cruelties of a crumbling state, denying millions the ability to control their lives.

In January, the president of Venezuela’s Maduro-controlled National Assembly, Jorge Rodríguez, surprised many by saying he was at least open to a discussion on the issue.

The country’s penal code, which dates to the 1800s, criminaliz­es abortion in nearly all cases, with punishment­s for pregnant women lasting six months to two years and one to nearly three years for abortion providers.

An exception allows doctors to perform abortions “to save the life” of a pregnant woman.

But to obtain a legal abortion, a girl or woman must first find a doctor who will diagnose her with a specific life-threatenin­g condition, said Dr. Jairo Fuenmayor, president of the country’s gynecologi­c society, and then have her case reviewed before a hospital ethics board.

The process is “cumbersome,” he said, and there are “very few” women who go through it.

The 13-year-old girl may have been eligible for a rare legal abortion, but the process is so infrequent­ly publicized, and there are so few doctors who will grant one, that neither she nor her mother knew they could seek one out.

Some women believe that simply raising the issue with a doctor will land them in the hands of the police.

Merida is the culturally conservati­ve, mountainou­s city where the 13-year-old girl lives with her mother and most of her seven siblings. Her father died when he was hit with a stray bullet in 2016, according to her mother. The family lives mostly on the remittance­s sent by the girl’s older sister, who lives in neighborin­g Colombia.

“We eat very little,” said the girl’s mother.

Their social lives revolve around a church they attend on Wednesdays and Sundays.

After the neighborho­od school closed two years ago, Rosales, 31, one of its teachers, remained a community pillar, stepping in to provide meals, workshops and emotional support as state services dwindled.

In October, the girl told her mother that she had been sexually assaulted repeatedly and had stopped getting her period. Her mother brought her to Rosales, a women’s rights activist who knew how to access misoprosto­l, a drug used around the world, legally in many places, to induce an abortion.

“I do not regret what I did,” said the girl’s mother, whom The Times is not naming to protect the girl’s identity. “Any other mother would have done the same.”

Rosales said she handed over the pills, and the girl ended her pregnancy. A day later, her mother went to the police to report the assaults.

But the police began to question the mother, discovered the abortion and instead instructed her to take them to the teacher.

Representa­tives for the local police and prosecutor­s did not respond to requests for interviews.

By December, Rosales had been in police custody for two months, sleeping on the floor in a cell with more than a dozen other women, including, for a time, the girl’s mother, who was also arrested and held for three weeks.

Rosales soon heard from her lawyers that she would be charged not only with facilitati­ng an abortion but also with conspiracy to commit a crime, a charge that could put her in prison for more than a decade.

In January, Rosales’ lawyer, Venus Faddoul, along with other activists, decided to go public with the case. The story caused so much internet outrage that Venezuela’s attorney general, Tarek Saab, took to Twitter to clarify that he had issued an arrest warrant for the accused rapist.

Authoritie­s in Mérida soon released Rosales to await trial under house arrest.

Abortion rights activists last month met for hours with Rodríguez, the National Assembly president, where they proposed a change to the penal code, among other ideas.

The country’s influentia­l associatio­n of Catholic bishops responded with a letter imploring the country to stick with the status quo.

Powerful internatio­nal organizati­ons, the associatio­n said, were trying to legalize abortion “by appealing to fake concepts of modernity, inventing ‘new human rights,’ and justifying policies that go against God’s designs.”

Rosales remains in legal limbo. Six months after her arrest, she has yet to have her first day in court.

The accused person is still free.

“This goes beyond being a negligent state,” she said. “This is a state that is actively working against women.”

 ?? MERIDITH KOHUT/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2020 ?? A mother with her 13-year-old daughter at their home in Merida, Venezuela. The girl had an abortion that has helped spur debate about further legalizing the procedure in the South American country.
MERIDITH KOHUT/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2020 A mother with her 13-year-old daughter at their home in Merida, Venezuela. The girl had an abortion that has helped spur debate about further legalizing the procedure in the South American country.

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