World

Top Mexico court rules criminalising abortion unconstitutional

Unanimous vote paves way for women to access procedure without fear of prosecution, imprisonment

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 08 Sep 2021 10:00AM

Top Mexico court rules criminalising abortion unconstitutional
Supporters of the legalisation of abortion take part in a demonstration during International Safe Abortion Day on September 28 last year, in Guadalajara, Mexico. Up to now, the procedure has only been permitted in cases of rape. – AFP pic, September 8, 2021

MEXICO CITY – Mexico’s Supreme Court yesterday ruled that criminalising abortion is unconstitutional in a decision hailed as “historic” by rights campaigners in the conservative Latin American country.

The unanimous vote opens the way for women across Mexico to access abortion without fear of being prosecuted and potentially imprisoned.

“It is one more step in the historical struggle for (women’s) equality, dignity, and the full exercise of their rights,” said court president Arturo Zaldivar.

He said that “from now on it will not be possible, without violating the criteria of the court and the constitution, to prosecute any woman who aborts in the cases that this court has considered valid”.

Up to now, abortion has been legal in Mexico City and three other states in the first 12 weeks of pregnancy, while elsewhere, the procedure was only permitted in cases of rape.

The declaration followed a constitutional challenge to the penal code of the northern state of Coahuila, bordering the United States’ state of Texas, which recently banned abortion after six weeks.

The ruling will affect the whole of Mexico, allowing women in states where abortion is criminalised to undergo the procedure with a judge’s order, a judicial source said.

“The woman must ask (the health services) to perform the abortion,” said Alex Ali Mendez, a constitutional lawyer and expert on abortion issues.

“When they deny it, she may go before a judge... and the judge will order that an abortion be performed,” Mendez said.

Mexico’s states have autonomy to dictate their laws, but they are invalidated if they contravene Supreme Court rulings that establish jurisprudence, like yesterday’s decision.

The Information Group on Reproductive Choice, which campaigns for abortion rights, welcomed what it called a “historic ruling”.

“We hope that throughout the country women and people with the ability to carry a child have the conditions and freedom to determine their reproductive destiny,” it said.

Unsafe abortion is the fourth leading cause of maternal death in Mexico, according to the group. – AFP, September 8, 2021

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