A decision by the Dominican Republic's constitutional court to reinstate a total ban on abortion is putting women's lives at risk, rights groups said.
Reforms
last year to amend the country's criminal code to allow abortion in
cases of rape, incest, a deformed foetus or when a woman's life is in
danger, were passed by congress and approved by President Danilo Medina.
The reforms, a result of years of debate over the abortion ban in the predominantly Catholic and socially conservative Caribbean country, were set to take effect on Dec. 27.
But
after an appeal by religious and conservative groups who said the
country's laws and constitution must protect the rights of an unborn
child at all costs, the court on Wednesday ruled changes to the criminal
code dating back to 1884 were unconstitutional.
"This decision takes women's and girls' human rights back to the 19th century," Erika Guevara, Americas director at Amnesty International, said in a statement on Thursday.
"Its
impact will be catastrophic for women and girls in the Dominican
Republic who will continue to be criminalised, stigmatised and forced to
seek out unsafe abortions because they are denied access to safe and
legal medical treatment."
Bishops from the country's influential Roman Catholic Church have publicly criticised moves to overturn the abortion ban.
Rights
groups say blanket bans on abortion are a leading cause of maternal
mortality because they force women to undergo dangerous backstreet
abortions.
Sergia Galvan, spokeswoman for local rights group, the Women and Health Collective, said the court's decision "continues
to place Dominican women, even those who long to be mothers, in a
dilemma - to die or go to jail - when they require health services, such
as abortion".
The Dominican Republic's
absolute ban on abortion has led to more than 90,000 unsafe abortions
occurring in the country each year, according to the U.S.-based Center
for Reproductive Rights.
Other countries in Latin America and the Caribbean that completely ban
abortion with no explicit exceptions include Chile, El Salvador,
Suriname, Honduras and Nicaragua, according to the Center for
Reproductive Rights.
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