Argentina Legalizes Abortion

Published December 13th, 2020 - 07:32 GMT
Demonstrators celebrate with green headscarves - the symbol of abortion rights activists - outside the Argentine Congress in Buenos Aires on December 11, 2020, after legislators passed a bill to legalize abortion. RONALDO SCHEMIDT / AFP
Demonstrators celebrate with green headscarves - the symbol of abortion rights activists - outside the Argentine Congress in Buenos Aires on December 11, 2020, after legislators passed a bill to legalize abortion. RONALDO SCHEMIDT / AFP

Lawmakers in Argentina's lower house of congress narrowly passed legislation Friday to legalize abortion, a key parliamentary step that followed nearly an entire day of contentious debate.

The Chamber of Deputies passed the bill by a vote of 131-117 after 20 hours of debate.

The bill, if it becomes law, would make it legal to end pregnancies up to 14 weeks -- and Argentina would be just the fourth Latin American country to legalize abortion.

The bill is part of President Alberto Fernandez's social agenda, which leans heavily toward reforms for women's rights.

 

While the bill faces uncertainty in the Argentine Senate, Fernandez's support lends the abortion-rights movement a voice it did not have under former center-right President Mauricio Macri.

A bill legalizing abortion was narrowly defeated two years ago in Argentina's Senate, which has long been opposed to abortion-rights legislation.

Another factor at play in the debate is that Pope Francis, an Argentina native, spoke out against the bill that failed in 2018.

The new version offers some changes from the old bill, including provisions to allow medical institutions to refer women to another clinic for an abortion. The updated bill also changes protocols in dealing with underage women with no parents.

Advocates hope the changes will be enough to get the bill passed in the Senate.

This article has been adapted from its original source.


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