World

Chile moves towards decriminalising elective abortion

Lower house of Congress approves bill, but yet to be approved by ultra-conservative Senate

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 29 Sep 2021 7:00PM

Chile moves towards decriminalising elective abortion
A demonstrator with her body painted reading ‘my body, my choice’ takes part in a march celebrating after Chile’s lower house of Congress took a step toward decriminalising abortion today. – AFP pic, September 29, 2021

SANTIAGO – Chile’s lower house of Congress today approved a bill to decriminalise abortion within 14 weeks of pregnancy, a major step towards legalisation of a procedure still only allowed in a handful of Latin American countries.

The proposal has yet to be approved by ultra-conservative Chile’s upper house, or Senate.

Today – on International Safe Abortion Day – lawmakers in the Chamber of Deputies gave the green light with 75 votes in favour, 68 against, and two abstentions, according to the congressional Twitter account.

The bill, submitted in 2018 by opposition lawmakers, seeks to change the existing law, which allows elective abortion only in three scenarios: when there is a threat to the life of the pregnant woman, if the fetus is unviable, or if the pregnancy was the result of rape.

These legal abortions represent only about 3% of the thousands of clandestine terminations taking place in the country, according to activists.

Until 2017, Chile maintained an outright ban on the procedure still denied to most women in Latin America.

“This is for all the women...who have been persecuted and criminalised,” tweeted Communist lawmaker Camila Vallejo, one of the authors of the bill.

“Down with the patriarchy which will fall, will fall!” she added. “Up with feminism, which will win, will win!”

In Latin American abortion is legal only in Uruguay, Cuba, Argentina – since January – and Guyana, as well as in Mexico City and three Mexican states.

It is banned in El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, the Dominican Republic, and Haiti, and most other countries allow it only for medical reasons or in case of rape.

Hundreds of Salvadoran women demonstrated outside Congress today, carrying signs bearing slogans such as “We all have the right to decide about our lives” and a large banner that read: “To decide is my right, legal abortion now.”

A committee of the protesters presented a proposal to Congress for legalising abortion in certain cases, such as when the pregnancy puts the woman’s life at risk, if the fetus is unlikely to survive after birth or if the pregnancy “is the result of sexual violence”.

The proposal comes after El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele withdrew a constitutional reform in mid-September, drafted by his own government, that would have opened the door to legalise therapeutic – or medically necessary – abortions. – AFP, September 29, 2021

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