Women's rights

New government rules try to “criminalize and impede” legal abortions by rape victims

Opposition has already begun legal proceedings to block measure altering legal

Translated by: Ítalo Piva

Brasil de Fato | São Paulo |
Health Ministry creates new rules that restrict access to legal abortions stemming from rape - RONALDO SCHEMIDT / AFP

The Brazilian Health Ministry created new rules that restrict access to legal abortions stemming from rape, a risk to a woman’s life or fetal anencephaly, the only causes that allow for the procedure to be performed legally in the country. 

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The ministry published the rules on Friday, August 28th, forcing health professionals to contact the police when patients ask to end a pregnancy that resulted from rape.

“The physician or other health professional responsible for providing care when there is a suspicion of rape is obligated to contact local police authorities”, says the document, published in the government's official daily press release and signed by interim health minister, general Eduardo Pazuello.

The decision, comes 12 days after religious fundamentalists tried to stop a legal abortion procedure from taking place on a 10 year old girl, who became pregnant after being repeatedly raped by her uncle. Furthermore, the new rules now require that a police report be presented when a legal abortion is requested.

For Sonia Coelho, member of the Sempreviva Feminist Organization (SOF), the measure is a way of “criminalizing and impeding” access to legal abortions, seeing as the previous norms sought to facilitate care for victims of sexual assault. Many times, the victim is scared of pressing charges against the attacker, who is often a family member.

“We saw recently the girl say that she was frequently threatened by her uncle, and this is the reality for many women and girls who are raped and are scared of going to the police. The fact that they could get an abortion without a police report made it easier for them to exercise their rights.”

The new measures are “a way of making it more difficult for girls and women to have access to legal abortions, as well as a way of intimidating health professionals. Though under certain circumstances abortions are lawful, many doctors are afraid of performing the procedure. This was implemented to make it more difficult for people to enjoy their rights, they have always wanted to do this”, she concludes.

Opposition parties are also taking a stance. Federal congresswoman Jandira Feghali and another 10 lawmakers filed a motion to suspend the new rules that “make legal abortions more difficult and aids in psychological violence against women”, the document read.

Obstetrician Olímpo Barbosa de Moraes Filho affirms that the Brazilian Association of Gynecologists and Obstetricians is totally against the rule changes, saying they are nothing more than yet another policy from the Federal government “against women and their dignity”, seeing as they create even more barriers for those simply trying to exercise their rights.

For Filho, forcing the victim to press charges is another form of “violence” since the State provides no security guarantees.

“The way it’s written, women will have no assistance. This means that the woman will press charges and then be thrown back into the community where her assailants are. This could be the end of some women’s lives. It’s an extermination policy”, he declared.

Other changes

The document also creates new hurdles when it comes to women being able to undergo legally sanctioned abortions. Among them is the requirement that doctors inform women of the possibility of seeing the fetus via an ultra-sound, and forcing them to sign a consent form with a list of the possible complications that may stem from an abortion.

Coelho sees this type of requirement as a form of “psychological torture” and victim blaming. “There are health professionals who are against women having access to this right, and they may force them to see the fetus as a way of torturing them and dissuading them from having the procedure”, he stated.

Edited by: Rodrigo Durão Coelho