The Guardian (USA)

El Salvador woman freed after six years in jail following stillbirth

- Liz Ford

A woman sentenced to 30 years in jail after a stillbirth that was judged to be her fault has been released from jail in El Salvador.

Cindy Erazo, 29, from San Salvador, was granted conditiona­l freedom on Wednesday after six years in jail.

Morena Herrera, head of the Citizen’s Group for the Decriminal­isation of Abortion, said that Erazo, who has a son aged 10, had an obstetric emergency when she was eight months pregnant. She was accused of attempting to end the pregnancy and charged with aggravated homicide. A year after her conviction, her sentenced was reduced to 10 years.

Dozens of women have been convicted for manslaught­er, homicide and aggravated homicide after having miscarriag­es, stillbirth­s and other obstetric emergencie­s since El

Salvador introduced a total ban on abortion in 1998.

Some women have been released from jail after having their conviction­s overturned or sentences reduced, following staunch campaignin­g from women’s rights groups.

But one of the women released last year, Evelyn Hernández, then 21, who had her 30-year sentence overturned at a retrial, could face a third trial as prosecutor­s seek to overturn her acquittal.

She was accused of killing her stillborn son.

More than 18 women are understood to still be in prison for abortionre­lated crimes.

The country’s president, Nayib Bukele, who took office in June last year, has pledged to legalise abortion when a woman’s life is at risk, and has stated that no woman should be jailed following obstetric emergencie­s.

“Today we celebrate Cindy’s freedom, who was sentenced to 30 years in prison under the basis of false accusation­s,” said Herrera. “Her freedom confirms that justice is possible if we unite our forces, and gives us hope for the freedom of other women.”

Paula Avila-Guillén, executive director of the Women’s Equality Center, said: “Cindy’s case casts an internatio­nal spotlight on the horrific reality of El Salvador’s extreme abortion ban, and the insidious culture of persecutin­g innocent women that it perpetuate­s.

“While Cindy is finally free, more than 18 innocent women are currently in prison who should immediatel­y be released. Many of these women have families waiting for them, and children being forced to survive without their mothers. Now more than ever – in the context of a deadly global pandemic – it is imperative that President Bukele and the courts liberate the women incarcerat­ed under this cruel law.”

 ?? Photograph: Marvin Recinos/AFP ?? Activists outside the women’s rehabilita­tion centre in Ilopango, El Salvador, last year to mark the release of three women serving 30-year sentences under the country’s anti-abortion laws.
Photograph: Marvin Recinos/AFP Activists outside the women’s rehabilita­tion centre in Ilopango, El Salvador, last year to mark the release of three women serving 30-year sentences under the country’s anti-abortion laws.
 ??  ?? El Salvador: 'I had a miscarriag­e. The judge accused me of murder' – video
El Salvador: 'I had a miscarriag­e. The judge accused me of murder' – video

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