BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — Argentina’s Supreme Court has ruled that a woman rescued from a prostitution ring must be allowed to have the abortion she wants, and chastised the public officials who put her in the center of a political firestorm.
The ruling was celebrated Friday by women’s advocates in Buenos Aires, where the federal justice ministry has been protecting the 32-year-old woman in a refuge for freed sex slaves.
Argentina allows legal abortions in rape cases or to protect a woman’s health. But politicians, doctors and judges often continue to block them, despite a Supreme Court ruling in March that was supposed to remove barriers to abortion and take judges out of such decisions.
In this case, a judge intervened anyway, saying there was no proof of rape even though the woman had been kidnapped and forced into prostitution.
The high court’s ruling Thursday night removed the judge’s injunction and urged public health officials to act urgently to end the pregnancy, which was entering its 10th week. The woman was expected to have undergone the procedure by early Friday, but her lawyers gave no details about that.
The ruling, signed by six of the seven justices, also blames Buenos Aires Mayor Mauricio Macri and the judge who intervened, saying they revealed details of her case that enabled anti-abortion protesters to converge on the public hospital where she was awaiting the procedure, and later on her private home as well.
Her lawyer, Pablo Vicente, told The Associated Press that hospital staff then gave her personal information to the protesters, enabling them to gather outside her home. Rather than help his client, the hospital’s priest joined the protests against her, said Vicente, who sued the group and the hospital director, alleging that her privacy was violated and her life threatened.
“They shouted that she’s a murderer, and threatened her that if she continues, that something really bad would happen to her,” Vicente said.
Macri also now faces lawsuits for initiating the controversy by announcing publicly that a 32-year-old freed sex slave was scheduled to have an abortion in a speech that mobilized anti-abortion forces to hunt her down. The judge in the case, Miriam Rustan de Estrada, also faces both judicial and criminal investigations for allegedly disobeying the higher court.
Repeated messages seeking comment from the Pro-Family Civil Association and the group’s attorney, Pedro Javier Maria Andereggen, were not returned. Macri has been traveling in Europe, but his deputy, Maria Eugenia Vidal, denied that the mayor had done anything wrong, and noted that he too appealed the judge’s decision, claiming she had overstepped her authority.
Argentina legalized abortion nearly a century ago in very limited cases, including when women have been raped or face serious health risks. But in practice, even these abortions are still very difficult to obtain. The high court ruled in March that the justice system should remove all barriers, but the decision lacks the force of a new federal law.
Health ministry data show 80,000 women are hospitalized with complications from illegal abortions in Argentina each year, suggesting that as many as 500,000 are getting the procedure anyway in needlessly risky situations, woman’s health advocate Estela Diaz said Friday.
“We urgently need a law to avoid victimizing the woman in these kinds of cases,” Vicente said. “It’s absolutely necessary to openly debate the abortion issue, and establish a national law that enables women to decide what to do with their bodies.”