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Judi Lynn

(160,219 posts)
Sat Oct 10, 2015, 12:36 AM Oct 2015

These Salvadoran Women Went to Prison for Suffering Miscarriages

October 9, 2015
These Salvadoran Women Went to Prison for Suffering Miscarriages

by Margaret Knapke

“Abortion” in English is aborto provocado in Spanish. “Miscarriage” is aborto espontáneo. Simple enough.

Yet in El Salvador, a largely Catholic Central American country of around 6 million, this distinction has been blurred. For many expectant mothers, pregnancy losses — unexpected, frightening, and tragic — have been declared intentional and criminal. Some of these mothers are doing hard time.

Why is this happening?

The country’s 1998 penal code — which was enacted under a right-wing president but remains in force under the country’s current center-left government — prohibits abortion in all circumstances. That includes even when the mother’s life is endangered by the pregnancy, the fetus is severely abnormal or nonviable, or the pregnancy is the result of rape or incest. The following year, the country’s constitution was amended to give the embryonic human a right to life from the moment of conception, reinforcing the total ban.

Now a woman convicted of having an abortion can be sentenced to 2-8 years in prison, while medical professionals assisting her can serve 6-12 years. Complicating matters, penalties for women increase dramatically when they’re charged with aggravated homicide of a family member, which can happen when the lost fetus is considered to have been viable. Mothers can be sentenced up to 50 years in prison on these charges.

This August, I was part of a U.S. delegation led by Roy Bourgeois from the School of Americas Watch and organized by the Center for Exchange and Solidarity, or CIS. We went to San Salvador to learn more about this no-exception anti-abortion law and the punitive atmosphere it has fostered.

More:
http://www.counterpunch.org/2015/10/09/these-salvadoran-women-went-to-prison-for-suffering-miscarriages-2/

Good reads:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/1016134155

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These Salvadoran Women Went to Prison for Suffering Miscarriages (Original Post) Judi Lynn Oct 2015 OP
this is just horrible KT2000 Oct 2015 #1
Horrible roody Oct 2015 #2
Venezuela is much more progressive on abortion rights FrodosPet Oct 2015 #3

KT2000

(20,544 posts)
1. this is just horrible
Sat Oct 10, 2015, 01:43 AM
Oct 2015

In the 70's my sister had a miscarriage and when she went to the hospital she had a D&C - although it was called an incomplete abortion. This was in a Catholic Hospital. Now I doubt they would even do that.

This abuse of women is justified by hubris and ignorance. I doubt this happens to wealthy women in San Salvador.

FrodosPet

(5,169 posts)
3. Venezuela is much more progressive on abortion rights
Tue Oct 13, 2015, 05:10 AM
Oct 2015

They DO allow abortions to save the life of the mother.

http://worldabortionlaws.com/map/

It is illegal otherwise.

http://venezuelanalysis.com/news/10939

Revolutionary Students Demonstrate Against Venezuela’s Strict Anti-Abortion Laws

Santa Elena de Uairen, October 2nd, 2014. (Venezuelanalysis.com) - On Sunday, around 200 Venezuelans from various socialist collectives gathered in the student residences of Plaza Venezuela, in Caracas, to protest the country’s strict anti-abortion laws.

Abortion is explicitly illegal in Venezuela except in life-threatening cases. The punishment for a woman who has an abortion is six months to two years in prison, while a doctor or other person who performs the procedure can be sentenced one to three years.

~ snip ~

“25 percent of adolescent deaths are caused by obstetric complications [in Venezuela],” Dubraska Hernandez, an anthropology student and lead organizer with the Conjura Feminista collective told Venezuelanalysis.com. “That’s 70,000 deaths a year which are never discussed.”

~ snip ~

Hernandez blames the widespread influence of religious and patriarchal values within Venezuelan society for this, and mentioned that the issue was consistently rejected even among left-wing circles. The city’s leading universities also refused to give the movement any amount of support, “which is why we took our call to the street,” she said.

~ snip ~
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