As Activists Rebuild Puerto Rico, Lawmakers Are Trying To Restrict Abortion
By Christianna Silva
Abortion rights are under siege in Puerto Rico.
On March 7, Puerto Rican lawmakers voted to pass
PS950, a bill that would require ladies under 18 years old to obtain their parent's consent to get an abortion, among other restrictions that activists argue would render the procedure virtually impossible for several people to receive. Governor Ricardo Rosselló immediately vetoed it, talking about the bill
imposes “onerous restrictions” on females. However that isn’t the end of PS950: Lawmakers in the Residence voted to override the governor’s veto, and right now, it’s sitting in the Senate waiting for another vote, which could happen any day now.
It is
currently legal for people in Puerto Rico to receive abortions at any point of their pregnancy without parental consent and has been since 1973 once the territory was required to adhere to the U.S. Supreme Court's decision on
Roe v. Wade, which made abortion legal in the U.S. Before then, it was
slightly more obtainable and affordable to get the procedure in Puerto Rico than it was in U.S. States, Alexandra-Marie Figueroa Miranda, the campaign and activism coordinator with Amnesty International Puerto Rico, told MTV News. As she put it, the island “used to be an abortion haven for white women” in particular. “The
y would travel to Puerto Rico to get their abortion … and then go back to the U.S.”
Before
Roe v. Wade was passed in 1973
The Society for Humane Abortions proposed Puerto Rico as one of a number of places around the world where females with the financial means could travel categorize in attempt to obtain an abortion, according to a 2012 study. “Numbers are tough to come by, yet abortions derived overseas were undoubtedly a tiny fraction of the unlawful abortions that girls derived by the hundreds of thousands every year,” the study notes.
Despite Puerto Rico’s history with reproductive rights, PS950 has been making its via Puerto Rican legislature in some form for about each year, Mayra I. Díaz Torres, the program director of Clínica IELLA/ProFamilias Puerto Rico, told MTV News. The original bill was retired in November 2018 largely because of pushback from activists. It had required people under the age of 21 to receive parental consent before the procedure, despite the fact that the age of consent on the island is 16 and that people over the age of 18
can drink and vote (
the legal age of minors in Puerto Rico is 21).
The bill also planned an enforced 48-hour waiting period, tried to ban abortions immediately after 20 weeks of gestation, and included a sentence of up to 15 years in prison should a provider perform abortions on patients that in any way broached these new restrictions.
According to Suggested Parenthood, nearly all abortions performed in the U.S. Are performed
before the 21-week mark, yet activists view 20-week bans as segment of a concerted task to ban abortion altogether.
As NARAL argues, “Sponsors of those bans are trying to lure the court into reopening the distribute problem of legal abortion entirely by moving away from the viability common customary in
Roe [v Wade].”
That first bill was met with considerable pushback from a couple of advocacy groups including Clínica IELLA/ ProFamilias Puerto Rico, an audience that educates people on the island about their reproductive rights. Representatives from more than 30 agencies participated in a media tour, protested the bill, and went to the hearings every day.
“We have seen some victories,” Díaz Torres mentioned of the activists’ work. “The first version of the bill was refused because of our pressure.”
Lawmakers went back to work, though, and introduced a new version of the bill with significantly fewer restrictions on patients, like lowering the threshold for parental consent to 18, as a substitute opposed to 21. Although, the bill still requires “informed consent” laws that require doctors providers to distribute patients statistics about alternatives to abortion in writing; providers must also be inspected annually by the Puerto Rico Health Department. Providers who fail to comply would face fines up to $10,000 — funds that could be allocated for health education campaigns focusing on abortion alternatives like adoption, which
activists mention still places a undue burden on pregnant people to be able to see a pregnancy through. Activists also argue that PS950, even in its updated state, places a undue burden on people seeking abortions for any reason, including those seeking abortions as a result of rape.
It’s obvious what the bill is trying to accomplish:
According to Refinery29, Sen. Nayda Venegas Brown, a pro-statehood lawmaker and evangelical minister who wrote the bill,
told the Senate chamber, “I wish this was a bill to ban abortion.”
Michel Collado, who works with the advocacy categorize Taller Salud, sees the push for PS950 as piece of a broader attack by conservative lawmakers on people’s sexual and reproductive rights. “Over the last few years, we’ve been struggling with a government that has eliminated access to sex education and gender perspective in public schools; they also cut funding to the NGOs [non-government organizations] that work with those issues,” she told MTV News over email. That lack of funding is being compounded by the effects of Hurricane Maria; as NGOs try to rebuild the island, they are usually prioritizing their resources in ways that of course design a ripple effect for other issues.
According to Alexandra-Marie Figueroa Miranda, the campaign and activism coordinator with Amnesty International Puerto Rico, the timing isn’t accidental. She pointed to
Naomi Klein’s economic theory of shock doctrine as a possible reason why the government is trying to push this legislation through right now. “Governments take huge shocks like environmental disasters and organic disasters to integrate really aggressive neoliberal policy,” she explained.
There isn’t much statistics on abortion rates in Puerto Rico, nevertheless
as Refinery29 pointed out, the most recent study accessible usually be from 1999; in it,
researchers found that only 23 out of every 1,000 pregnancies resulted in abortion, among the lowest rates in the world.
Although, Figueroa Miranda notes, Puerto Rico is largely “conservative Catholic, due to our colonial relationship with Spain. So a lot of fundamentalists are attempting to use their population attempt to push very religious rhetoric into national politics.”
“If you get pregnant, you're going to have to keep it,” she adds, explaining that, as the island is so religious, abortion just isn’t segment of their culture, and that adoption is largely frowned upon.
However one one of the most damning characteristic of the bill is how little attention is being given to it by the rest of the U.S. “The supply is that we never get to tell these stories outdoors of the island,” Figueroa Miranda says. “We are so dehumanized that our government feels like they can do whichever because nobody is fact-checking. Nobody is putting a stop hold on the policies and measures. And the largest thing that we need since Maria, is we've needed our voices to be given a platform.”
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