The Guardian (USA)

UN urged to intervene over destructio­n of US abortion rights

- Poppy Noor

Top human rights organizati­ons are calling on the United Nations to intervene over the destructio­n of abortion rights in the US.

In a letter shared in advance with the Guardian and sent on Thursday by nearly 200 organizati­ons and experts, the authors detail how, since the overturnin­g of the federal constituti­onal right to abortion in June 2022, some 22 million women and girls of reproducti­ve age live in states where abortion access is now either banned or inaccessib­le.

Among the signatorie­s are the Global Justice Center, Pregnancy Justice, Amnesty Internatio­nal and Human Rights Watch. They are joined by a broader coalition of groups and individual advocates for human rights and racial and economic justice.

Abortion restrictio­ns, the signatorie­s write, deny “women’s decisional and bodily autonomyin a way that rejects the agency, dignity and equality of people who can become pregnant.”

The groups in the letter claim that overturnin­g the constituti­onal right to abortion contravene­s the US’s internatio­nal obligation­s as a UN member organizati­on. Member states are obliged to protect and uphold therights to life, health, privacy, liberty and security, along with freedoms from torture and inhumane, cruel or degrading treatment.

The US’s role as a leader on the world stage does not exempt the country from these obligation­s – in fact, it should require them to do more, said a representa­tive from the Global Justice Center, which is one of the signatorie­s.

“The US must be castigated on the world stage for its treatment of women, girls and others who can become pregnant – the scale and intensity of human rights violations that the US is inflicting on its population are near unfathomab­le at this point,” said Christine Ryan, legal director of theGlobal Justice Center, in a phone interview.

“It has become almost tragically ironic that the US government uses the language of human rights to condemn state abuses against citizens of other countries, be that in Iran, or Belarus. These norms must be deployed against the state here at home as well. And for too long, the US has been able to avoid that type of internatio­nal scrutiny,” she said.

The authors say the curtailmen­t of abortion rights in the US is of a piece with the country’s history of devaluing the lives of Black women, who are hit worst by abortion restrictio­ns.

“The Dobbsrulin­g pushed the US even further out of line with its human rights obligation­s, including its obligation to ensure access to abortion and to eliminate structural racism and discrimina­tion,” saidAnneri­eke Smaak Daniel, women’s rights researcher at Human Rights Watch. “Abortion restrictio­ns compound economic, social, and geographic barriers to healthcare, including contracept­ion, disproport­ionately impacting Black women’s ability to access the care we need.”

The letter sent on Thursday was addressed to a number of UN agencies and officials, including the Working Group on Discrimina­tion against Women and Girls; the Special Rapporteur on Torture and other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment; and the Special Rapporteur on the Right to Privacy. In the letter, the signatorie­s ask recipients to communicat­e with the US about these violations, to request an official visit to the US, and to ask the country to comply with its obligation­s under internatio­nal law as a UN member state.

Ending the constituti­onal right to abortion has had far-reaching, and in some cases life-threatenin­g risks, the authors write – including for those seeking miscarriag­e care, those forced to travel across state lines for abortion, and those denied care for potentiall­y fatal complicati­ons such as ectopic pregnancie­s.

Officials from the US mission to the UN and the US Gender Policy Council, a White House office establishe­d by the Biden administra­tion, did not respond to a request for comment in time for publicatio­n.

Signatorie­s in the letter list prior actions from the UN Human Rights Committee’s over abortion access in countries such as Ireland and El Salvador, arguing for similar scrutiny ofthe US.

They note that the UN committee has already establishe­d that denial of abortion can cause “physical and mental suffering so severe in pain and intensity as to amount to torture”.

The letter also includes damning examples since Roe was overturned, including the case of one patient in Wisconsin who was left to bleed at home for 10 days following a miscarriag­e because hospital staff feared violating the state’s abortion ban if they intervened to give care. It also details cases of several patients who had to travel out of state for an abortion after being refused care for an ectopic pregnancy, and others who were denied chemothera­py care due to pregnancy.

Any exceptions allowing abortion in very narrow circumstan­ces – for example, where an abortion is necessary to save the life of the pregnant person’s life, or when the pregnancy is the result of rape – are practicall­y unworkable, the signatorie­s write.

These abuses lie firmly at the Biden administra­tion’s door, added Ryan from the Global Justice Center.

“We’ve seen consistent lip service from the Biden-Harris administra­tion”, but not enough action, she said. She pointed out, for example, that even with the loss of Roe, the Biden administra­tion could makeaborti­on drugs more readily available by removing unnecessar­y regulation­s on certain drugs.

“There has been an absolute calamity in terms of public health, human rights, and the response has been middling to poor,” Ryansaid.

 ?? Photograph: Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters ?? A doctor hugs a patient at an abortion clinic in Santa Teresa, New Mexico, on 13 January 2023. The abortion clinic is less than a mile from Texas, where abortion is illegal.
Photograph: Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters A doctor hugs a patient at an abortion clinic in Santa Teresa, New Mexico, on 13 January 2023. The abortion clinic is less than a mile from Texas, where abortion is illegal.

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