MONTEVIDEO,
Uruguay (AP) — Uruguay's congress appeared ready on Tuesday to legalize
abortion, a groundbreaking move in Latin America, where no country save Cuba
has made abortions accessible to all women during the first trimester of
pregnancy.
Compromises
made to secure votes disappointed both sides of the abortion divide, which
gathered in protest. Once it gets through Uruguay's lower house, the measure
would go back to the Senate for approval of changes, but President Jose Mujica
has said he will allow it to become law.
The measure
would give women the right to a legal abortion during the first 12 weeks of
pregnancy, and decriminalize later-term abortions when the mother's life is at
risk or when the fetus is so deformed that it wouldn't survive after birth. In
cases of rape, abortions would be legal during the first 14 weeks.
The goal is
to reduce the number of illegal abortions in Uruguay, Congressman Ivan Posada
of the center-left Independent Party told his fellow lawmakers Tuesday. Posada
wrote the measure and is expected to provide a key 50th vote against the
opposition of 49 other lawmakers.
"They
talk of 30,000 a year, a hypothetical number, but whatever the number is, it's
quite dramatic for a country where 47,000 children are born each year,"
Posada explained earlier in an Associated Press interview.
A poll this
month showed 52 percent of Uruguayans would vote to legalize abortion if the
question were put to the people, while 34 percent would vote against it. The
survey of 802 people nationwide by the CIFRA consulting firm had a 3.4
percentage point margin of error.
Compromises
include requiring women seeking abortions to justify their request before a
panel of at least three professionals — a gynecologist, psychologist and social
worker — and listen to advice about alternatives including adoption and support
services if should she decide to keep the baby.
Then, she
must wait five more days "to reflect" on the consequences before the
procedure.
"It's
important that the woman who decides to have an abortion attend this meeting
where she will be informed, where they'll explain all the options including
alternatives that she is free to choose from," Posada told the AP.
The review
panel should obtain the father's point of view, but only if the woman agrees.
Women under 18 must show parental consent, but they can seek approval from a
judge instead if they're unwilling or unable to involve their parents in the
decision.
The measure
also allows entire private health care institutions, as well as individual
health care providers, to decline to perform abortions.
Such
requirements raised objections from Amnesty International and other groups,
which say layers of bureaucracy will create barriers and delay abortions until
more than 12 weeks have passed, thus forcing women and health care providers
into criminal territory.
"This
is not the law for which we fought for more than 25 years," complained
Marta Agunin, who directs Women and Health, a non-governmental organization in
Uruguay.
Also
opposed are Uruguay's Catholic and evangelical institutions, which along with
public hospitals provide much of the available health care in Uruguay.
A statement
from Uruguay's Catholic University says it makes no sense to punish a woman for
killing a fetus that is 12 weeks and 1 day old, but to decriminalize abortions
before then. Conservatives also object to the removal of a proposal to require
the father's consent before any abortion.
Cuba, which
decriminalizes abortions in the first 10 weeks of pregnancy, is the only
country in Latin America where legal abortion is common. Argentina and Colombia
allow it only in cases of rape or when the mother's life is endangered.
Colombia also allows it when there is proof of fetal malformation. Mexico City
has legalized first-trimester abortions, but there are restrictions in most
other parts of the country.
Many
countries ban abortions under any conditions.
Uruguay's
lawmakers have no desire to make their country a destination for women from
other countries seeking abortions. The measure says only Uruguayan citizens and
women who can prove at least one year's residency can apply. "This is a solution
for those who live here, not that Uruguay becomes a place that attracts people
from other countries for this procedure," Posada told the AP.
Opposition
Deputy Javier Garcia of the center-right National Party accused lawmakers of
treating living embryos as if they were "disposable," which he
equated with murder.
The margin
for the law was razor-thin on Tuesday after Deputy Andres Lima of the ruling
Broad Front coalition said he would refuse to vote. With Posada joining the
coalition, the measure appeared headed for passage by a 50-49 vote margin.
Dr. Marie
Gonzalez, bioethicist at the University of the Republic, called the measure
"evil" and vowed to work to persuade her fellow gynecologists to
refuse to perform the procedure if it becomes law.
"The
embryo-fetus is a human being, and as such has rights, like the human right to
live," she said.
"Recalibration of Knowledge" – Jan 14, 2012 (Kryon channelled by Lee Carroll) - (Subjects: Channelling, God-Creator, Benevolent Design, New Energy, Shift of Human Consciousness, (Old) Souls, Reincarnation, Gaia, Old Energies (Africa,Terrorists, Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Venezuela ... ), Weather, Rejuvenation, Akash, Nicolas Tesla / Einstein, Cold Fusion, Magnetics, Lemuria, Atomic Structure (Electrons, Particles, Polarity, Self Balancing, Magnetism, Higgs Boson), Entanglement, "Life is necessary for a Universe to exist and not the other way around", DNA, Humans (Baby getting ready, First Breath, Stem Cells, Embryonic Stem Cells, Rejuvenation), Global Unity, ... etc.) - (Text Version)
"... I want to define life for you - not biological life, but spiritual life. So for all those intellectuals, just hold on, for many won't like this. Spiritual life, as measured by Spirit, is when a Human has free choice. When is that? It's when they take their first breath. Not in utero. There will be those who will say, "That's wrong, that's wrong. The soul in the woman's body is alive!" Just wait. I'm talking about spiritually. That which Spirit sees, and it's when you come from the other side of the veil and take your first breath.
A child with the mother has no free choice. That child is linked to the choice of the mother until it is born. It is, indeed, a soul in preparation for free choice, and there are many attributes that are spiritual that we have discussed before about how that soul reacts. But now I'm discussing life with polarity [duality], free choice.
But let's discuss that "child inside" for a moment, for there is a process I want you to know about. I want to talk about 240 days into the pregnancy. At about that time, the child has perfect DNA. It hasn't taken its first breath. The DNA hasn't measured the energy of the planet yet, since it is contained. Did you realize that? Inside the womb is a perfect child. The child's DNA has all the attributes of the Akash and also the parent, but it's different in a way you have not been told. The DNA is 100% as designed.
The quantum instructions within the DNA are all talking to the biology of the child,, getting ready for the first breath. ..."
But let's discuss that "child inside" for a moment, for there is a process I want you to know about. I want to talk about 240 days into the pregnancy. At about that time, the child has perfect DNA. It hasn't taken its first breath. The DNA hasn't measured the energy of the planet yet, since it is contained. Did you realize that? Inside the womb is a perfect child. The child's DNA has all the attributes of the Akash and also the parent, but it's different in a way you have not been told. The DNA is 100% as designed.
The quantum instructions within the DNA are all talking to the biology of the child,, getting ready for the first breath. ..."
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