The Guardian (USA)

Argentina legalises abortion in landmark moment for women's rights

- Tom Phillips , Latin America correspond­ent, and Amy Booth and Uki Goñi in Buenos Aires

Argentina has become the largest Latin American country to legalise abortion after its senate approved the historic law change by 38 votes in favour to 29 against, with one abstention.

Elated pro-choice campaigner­s who had been keeping vigil outside Buenos Aires’s neoclassic­al congressio­nal palace erupted in celebratio­n as the result was announced at just after 4am on Wednesday.

Women screamed with delight, sweeping their friends into tight hugs and jumping in ecstasy. Many wept tears of joy. Victory music kicked in and green smoke filled the air. A triumphant message flashed up on a big screen above the joyful crowd: “We did it!” it said. “ES LEY!” (IT’S LAW!).

“I’m very emotional,” said 25-yearold Melany Marcati, who was among the celebrator­s. “There are no words to describe what your body feels after fighting for something for so long. I cried a lot, which I wasn’t expecting.”

The campaigner Ingrid Beck said: “The struggle for women’s rights is always arduous, and this time we even had to contend with a pandemic, so I am overjoyed with this result.”

The bill, which legalises terminatio­ns in the first 14 weeks of pregnancy, was approved by Argentina’s lower house earlier this month after being put to congress by the country’s leftwing president, Alberto Fernández.

“Safe, legal and free abortion is now law … Today we are a better society,” Fernández celebrated on Twitter after the result was confirmed.

Fernández has previously said that more than 3,000 women had died as a result of unsafe, undergroun­d abortions in Argentina since the return of democracy in 1983.

The landmark decision means Argentina becomes only the third

South American country to permit elective abortions, alongside Uruguay, which decriminal­ised the practice in 2012, and Guyana, where it has been legal since 1995.

Cuba legalised the practice in 1965 while Mexico City and the Mexican state of Oaxaca also allow terminatio­ns.

Giselle Carino, an Argentinia­n feminist activist, said she believed the achievemen­t in the home country of Pope Francis would reverberat­e across a region that is home to powerful Catholic and evangelica­l churches and some of the harshest abortion laws in the world.

In most countries, such as Brazil, abortions are only permitted in extremely limited circumstan­ces such as rape or risk to the mother’s life, while in some, such as the Dominican Republic and El Salvador, they are banned altogether.

“I feel incredibly proud of what we’ve been able to achieve. This is a historic moment for the country, without a doubt,” said Carino, head of the Internatio­nal Planned Parenthood Federation, Western Hemisphere Region.

“It shows how, in spite of all the obstacles, change and progress are possible. Argentinia­n women and what’s happening right now will have an enormous impact on the region and the world,” Carino added, pointing to parallel struggles in Brazil, Chile and Colombia.

Colombian activists recently petitioned the constituti­onal court to remove abortion from the country’s criminal code while campaigner­s in Chile hope a new constituti­on might lead to expanded women’s rights.

In the region’s most populous nation, Brazil, activists are waiting for the supreme court to rule on a 2018 legal challenge that would decriminal­ise abortion in the first weeks of pregnancy.

Mariela Belski, Amnesty Internatio­nal’s executive director in Argentina, called the result “an inspiratio­n to the Americas”.

“Argentina has sent a strong message of hope to our entire continent: that we can change course against the criminalis­ation of abortion and against clandestin­e abortions, which pose serious risks to the health and lives of millions of people.”

Wednesday’s victory is the result of five years of mass protest marches by Argentina’s grassroots women’s movement, which began as a Twitter campaign against gender violence that used the hashtag #NiUnaMenos (“Not one less” – meaning no more women lost to gender violence).The first spontaneou­s march came on 3 June 2015, in reaction to the murder of 14-year-old Chiara

Páez, who was found buried underneath her boyfriend’s house after being beaten to death and a few months pregnant.

“Aren’t we going to raise our voices? THEY ARE KILLING US,” the radio journalist Marcela Ojeda tweeted at the time. After that call to arms, a group of female journalist­s began tweeting under the #NiUnaMenos hashtag, resulting in the first of many marches that brought tens of thousands of women to gather at the congressio­nal square in Buenos Aires.The following year, Argentinia­n feminists held a mass strike in response to the rape, murder and impalement of 16-year-old Lucía Pérez in the coastal city of Mar del Plata.

It was after the 2015 #NiUnaMenos march that pro-choice campaigner­s realised the fight against “femicide” could also encompass demands for access to legal abortion.

They adopted a green scarf – worn as a bandana, head-scarf, or around the wrist – as a symbol of their movement, a trend that quickly spread to other Latin American countries, where green has come to symbolise the broader fight for women’s rights.

That green scarf was an allusion to the Mothers of Plaza de Mayo activists who wore white headscarve­s as they confronted Argentina’s vicious 1976-83 dictatorsh­ip over the disappeara­nce of their children.

Pro-choice campaigner­s initially saw their hopes of change dashed in August 2018 when the senate, under pressure from the Catholic church, rejected a similar bill.

Fernández’s election the following year brought fresh hope, as he promised to back the push for change. “The criminalis­ation of abortion has achieved nothing,” he said in November after putting the legislatio­n to congress.

Speaking outside congress on Wednesday, 46-year-old Julieta Cabrera said: “Until the last moment I didn’t want to believe it, not until the last vote was in, because last time, we got our hopes up.” She said she had come out because “abortion is something I’ve experience­d firsthand. My generation and many others have been through it.”

Opponents of the law, who had gathered nearby by a giant model foetus that is their trademark, dispersed quickly after the result emerged, with one man occasional­ly shouting the word “Murderers!” towards the prochoice side.

Karina Marolla, a 49-year-old opponent of the law, said: “What was voted for today is the death penalty for the most innocent. Today in Argentina there’s no law giving the death penalty to rapists or murderers. So we’re feeling sad, to put it lightly.”

Carino said the leftward political shift that brought Fernández to power had undoubtedl­y boosted the pro-choice campaign after the previous year’s setback. Among those who helped Fernández win office were many young women who took part in the #NiUnaMenos protests and were voting for the first time.

Carino said the real credit lay with Argentina’s indefatiga­ble women “who never stopped occupying the streets and the social networks – not even against the backdrop of the pandemic – and kept up their struggle, without haste but without rest”.

“If anything made the difference, it was this.”

 ??  ?? Argentina’s vice- president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner speaks during the debate on the abortion bill. Photograph: Matias Baglietto/Reuters
Argentina’s vice- president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner speaks during the debate on the abortion bill. Photograph: Matias Baglietto/Reuters
 ??  ?? Pro-choice demonstrat­ors celebrate. Photograph: Ricardo Ceppi/Getty Images
Pro-choice demonstrat­ors celebrate. Photograph: Ricardo Ceppi/Getty Images

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