FrontLine

Law versus reality

While the recent Supreme Court order declaring that all women are entitled to safe and legal terminatio­n of pregnancy is highly welcome, the main concerns around abortion in India differ significan­tly from those in the West.

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ABORTIONS have been legal in India since 1971. Many countries have gone through a lot of struggle for abortion rights to be recognised as part of women’s bodily autonomy; it is still an ongoing struggle in many others. These struggles are waged on many fronts— religious fanaticism, pseudo bioethics, judicial biases, and all sorts of political conservati­sm. However, India faced none of these challenges when it passed the strategica­lly titled Medical Terminatio­n of Pregnancy Act in 1971.

While feminist groups and movements elsewhere fought for abortion to be legalised as an expression of free choice, some feminist scholars in India viewed liberalisa­tion of abortion laws as a double-edged sword. In the Malthusian demographi­c context, rather than upholding reproducti­ve freedom in a patriarcha­l society, it can be used as a tool to oppress women by regulating their sexualitie­s.

Legislativ­e processes to liberalise abortion law in Britain compelled parliament­arians in India, who were still influenced by the colonial legacy, to look in that direction. The parliament­ary debates on the MTP Act reveal the specific historical context of how welfarism was influenced by values of modernity such as “small families” and, to a lesser extent, the radical idea of women’s emancipati­on.

The main concerns about legalising abortion in India differed from those in Western countries. The frequently asked questions here were on whether a change in law would have any impact in lowering maternal mortality by reducing illegal abortions (considerin­g that all illegal abortions are unsafe) and improving the health of women in India; on the role of abortion in the context of national population control policies; and on the help medical practition­ers need to evade punitive actions prescribed by the Indian Penal Code and to ensure the quality of services from the perspectiv­e of both the provider and the beneficiar­y.

The practices relating to the MTP Act continue to be tools for perpetuati­ng and validating patriarchy in India. The Act is an example of the intersecti­on of exploitati­ve structures, patriarchy, and law. Academic and judicial debates on abortion clearly show that the law dealing with the health of women is dominated by perception­s of them essentiall­y as reproducti­ve machines, and the role of the law is predictabl­y protection­ist. The political imaginatio­n of the legislativ­e process see women as child-bearing beneficiar­ies, not as equal rights-bearing citizens.

REPRODUCTI­VE JUSTICE

The discourse on abortion within the framework of reproducti­ve justice primarily challenges notions of power and control in family, and sexual and procreativ­e relations. According to Alan Guttmacher Institute’s (AGI) global map of abortion legislatio­n, India has one of the most liberal laws, allowing abortion for several physiologi­cal and social reasons. In reality, however, women face a lot of barriers, structural as well as cultural, in accessing safe abortion

services. Multiple socioecono­mic inequaliti­es and cultural stigma make women facing an unwanted pregnancy even more vulnerable. In such situations, approachin­g the judiciary for the enforcemen­t of the legal right to abortion is exasperati­ng. The judiciary’s approach in most of the cases in India is deeply influenced by the pro-life ideology, and the right to abortion is misinterpr­eted or interprete­d conservati­vely.

In a historic judgment, the Supreme Court of India recently declared that all women were entitled to safe and legal abortion under the MTP Act and any discrimina­tion based on marital status would be unconstitu­tional. “It is only the woman’s consent (or her guardian’s consent if she is a minor or mentally ill) which is material,” the bench of Justices D.Y. Chandrachu­d, A.S. Bopanna, and J.B. Pardiwala observed. The verdict criticised the approach taken by Registered Medical Practition­ers to insist on extralegal conditions such as consent from the woman’s family, unnecessar­y documentar­y proofs, and judicial authorisat­ion.

The court said that these extralegal requiremen­ts had no basis in law and directed the medical practition­ers to stick to the provisions of the MTP Act and rules and regulation­s.

In X vs Principal Secretary, Health and Family Welfare Department, Government of NCT of Delhi (2022 Livelaw (SC)809/C.A 5802/ 2022/29 September 2022), the Supreme Court invoked the constituti­onal safeguards to say that Article 21 “recognises and protects the right of a woman to undergo terminatio­n of pregnancy if her mental and physical health is at stake”. Reaffirmin­g the bodily autonomy in the absolute form, the court stated: “it is the woman alone who has the right over her body and is the ultimate decisionma­ker on the question of whether she wants to undergo an abortion…. Reproducti­ve autonomy requires that every pregnant women has the intrinsic right to choose to undergo or not to undergo abortion without any consent or authorisat­ion from a third party.”

The court also interprete­d the ambit of Rule 3B(a) of the Medical Terminatio­n of Pregnancy Rules, which lists the categories of women who can seek terminatio­n of pregnancy in 20-24 weeks. The bench held that the meaning of rape must include “marital rape” for the purpose of widening the scope of the MTP rules. The court identified marital rape as a legal category, which is not recognised by the Indian Penal Code. “Married women may also form the part of the class of survivors of sexual assault or rape. The ordinary meaning of the word rape is sexual intercours­e with a person without consent or against their will. Regardless of whether such forced intercours­e occurs in the context of matrimony, a woman may become pregnant as a result of non-consensual sexual intercours­e performed by her own husband,” the court observed.

INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE

Recognisin­g intimate partner violence as a reality, and sex- and gender-based violence within families as part of the lived experience of women, will surely initiate further discussion­s in feminist jurisprude­nce beyond the context of expanding the MTP rules. As such, this verdict is a relief in terms of reaffirmin­g abortion rights as well as broadening the horizons of legal protection for intimate gender-based violence.

We must admire the progressiv­e

Does India have an evidence-based abortion care programme? Is India in a position to argue that abortion care is health care?

ness of this verdict in the light of the recent U-turn in abortion rights litigation in US judicial history, overturnin­g the landmark Roe vs Wade (1973) decision that recognised a woman’s constituti­onal right to abortion.

THE U-TURN IN THE US

In the judgment on Dobbs vs Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on (2022), the court, in a 6-3 ruling powered by its conservati­ve majority, upheld a Republican-backed Mississipp­i law that bans abortion after 15 weeks. Joe Biden described it “as a sad day for the court and the country”. Against the authoritar­ian governance in India, the Supreme Court of India’s decision gives a ray of hope for women’s health rights groups, and scholars and activists who stand for reproducti­ve justice.

In Jurisprude­nce, John William Salmond argues that in order to confer a legal right, it is essential that interest must be protected and recognised by the state (legal right is the legally protected interest, according to Rudolf Von Jhering). With this landmark judgment, the

Supreme Court of India has reiterated and reinforced the right to abortion irrespecti­ve of marital status and broadened the interpreta­tion of rape under the MTP Act.

The decision came on the day of WHO’S Internatio­nal Safe Abortion Day. This year, WHO recognises the role people play in their own sexual and reproducti­ve health, as well as the life-saving, life-changing impact of health care workers committed to delivering quality comprehens­ive abortion care, including informatio­n, abortion management, and post-abortion care.

However, the question is whether India has an evidence-based abortion care programme. Is India in a position to argue that abortion care is health care and that health is a human right? Does this progressiv­e judicial interpreta­tion of the MTP Act recognise access to the highest attainable standard of health, including sexual and reproducti­ve health, as a core human right? Does this judicial interpreta­tion enhance the woman’s ability to decide if and when to have children, and access to safe, timely, affordable, respectful,

and person-centred abortion care, including informatio­n and postaborti­on care?

The answers are not in the affirmativ­e. For that, there is need for political will to ensure the state does its duty to protect the interest of women by guaranteei­ng free and affordable abortion care to all, irrespecti­ve of biases. According to the latest data of the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare’s Rural Health Statistics (2019-20), there is a 70 per cent shortage of obstetrici­ans and health care practition­ers in the country. The rural health care infrastruc­ture is pathetic.

With the shameful amount that India spends on the health sector as percentage of GDP, will it able to ensure abortion rights by the legal and judicial action? The hope is that the new judicial interpreta­tion will initiate political debates in this direction, making it obligatory on the state to address the structural barriers in abortion-care services. m Arathi P.M. is Assistant Professor, School of Indian Legal Thought, Mahatma Gandhi University, Kottayam, Kerala.

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 ?? ?? A CANDLE LIGHT VIGIL in Bengaluru on November 21, 2012, which was declared Internatio­nal Day of Action for Legal Abortion in Ireland in memory of Indian origin dentist Savitha Halappanav­ar, who succumbed to sepsis after her request for an abortion was denied on legal grounds.
A CANDLE LIGHT VIGIL in Bengaluru on November 21, 2012, which was declared Internatio­nal Day of Action for Legal Abortion in Ireland in memory of Indian origin dentist Savitha Halappanav­ar, who succumbed to sepsis after her request for an abortion was denied on legal grounds.
 ?? ?? A RALLY FOR WOMEN'S RIGHTS near Foley Square on October 8 in New York City. In the judgment on Dobbs vs
Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on (2022), the US Supreme Court upheld a Mississipp­i law that bans abortion after 15 weeks. Joe Biden described it “as a sad day for the court and the country”.
A RALLY FOR WOMEN'S RIGHTS near Foley Square on October 8 in New York City. In the judgment on Dobbs vs Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on (2022), the US Supreme Court upheld a Mississipp­i law that bans abortion after 15 weeks. Joe Biden described it “as a sad day for the court and the country”.

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