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For Nicaraguans, International
Women’s Day Marks a Step Back
By Angela Heimburger and Lance LattiG
March 8, 2008 (HRW) Until recently, Nicaraguan women had
something to celebrate on March 8, International Women’s Day.
Nicaraguan women have fought for years to protect women’s
rights, not to restrict them, and decades ago the government eliminated
some of the sexist laws that discriminated against women.
International Women's Day this year marks a day of mourning as well
as celebration in Nicaragua. In November 2006 the National Assembly
enacted a blanket ban on abortion, criminalizing the procedure even
when a woman’s life is at risk. Since then, dozens of Nicaraguan
women with medical conditions that require a lifesaving therapeutic
abortion or emergency obstetric care have died needless deaths or
suffered severe disabilities.
Nicaraguan doctors told us of the chilling effect the ban has had
on their ability to deliver emergency obstetric care. With healthcare
workers fearing prosecution if they are suspected of an inducing
an abortion, one young woman bled to death because she could not
receive treatment in a public hospital. Doctors say they are torn
between obeying the dictates of Nicaragua’s new penal code
and ensuring their patient’s well-being.
In October 2007 we published a report documenting the devastating
effects of the abortion ban and detailing how it violates women’s
basic rights. We urged the Sandinista government to clarify the
existing legal protocols for healthcare workers, but so far it has
failed to do so, leaving women with no guarantee of timely and effective
access to emergency services.
We also asked the Supreme Court to decide on the constitutionality
of the ban, and called on President Ortega to veto the measure stripping
the penal code of a provision that had allowed legal abortion for
more than 130 years. So far neither the President, nor the Supreme
Court, nor the state at large has responded by taking the necessary
urgent actions.
Nicaraguans have also been requesting a decision from their Supreme
Court. In January 2007 the Strategic Group for the Decriminalization
of Abortion issued a petition to the Supreme Court to declare Law
603, which criminalizes all forms of therapeutic abortion, unconstitutional.
The Supreme Court had 60 days to respond after the attorney general’s
office, the national legislature, and the executive office issued
their decisions. That window of opportunity closed on June 12 of
last year. The Strategic Group submitted a written statement February
28 of this year, demanding that the Court respond to the petition
filed in January 2007. But there are concerns that it may have to
file yet another time if the new penal code goes into effect during
this process.
The Supreme Court no doubt has many cases in its docket, but women’s
lives and health remain at risk in the meantime. According to research
by Dr. Arnold Toruño of the Universidad Autónoma de
Nicaragua-León, historically although the law has prohibited
induced abortions, there has in practice been a high rate of them
in Nicaragua.
"Restrictive laws have had little effectiveness in stopping
abortions from happening in our country," Dr. Toruño
wrote. "The clear lesson is that offering prison to women,
far from being a good solution to the problem, increases maternal
mortality."
Indeed, consistent with the research, despite the ban, Nicaraguan
women continue to need and have abortions, therapeutic and otherwise—but
not in public hospitals and clinics. While wealthier Nicaraguans
might obtain clandestine abortions at high premium, poor women and
those in rural areas have no such recourse. Ironically, a leftist
government’s policy is only reinforcing the vast social divide.
Maternal mortality rates in Nicaragua continue to be among the worst
in the Western Hemisphere, but the Ministry of Health has begun
to address the dearth of healthcare services for the poor. It has
dispatched specially equipped brigades to remote areas and is importing
Cuban doctors to fill gaps.
Last week the Ministry of Health reported a six percent decrease
in the maternal mortality rate in the past year. These improvements
may well reflect the government’s stepped-up efforts to expand
access to health care. On the other hand, the prohibition of medically
necessary procedures like therapeutic abortions is not only restricting
women’s access to health care, but it is also putting their
lives at risk.
On International Women’s Day this year, it is time to readjust
the scenario and take back women’s health and lives.
From:http://hrw.org/english/docs/2008/03/12/nicara18276.htm
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