The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

US: 10-year-old girl denied abortion after rape

2022-07-05T00:10:36.884Z


A few days after the Supreme Court's decision to repeal the right to abortion, this little girl had to travel to neighboring Indiana to have her pregnancy terminated.


While the Supreme Court of the United States has just repealed the right to abortion, this decision is already having tragic consequences for thousands of women and girls across the country.

The Columbus Dispatch

newspaper

has just given the example of a ten-year-old girl who was refused an abortion in her state of Ohio, forcing her to travel to neighboring Indiana, where the practice is still authorized. , to perform an abortion.

She had exceeded the now legal deadline of six weeks by three days.

Read alsoRan Halevi: “Abortion in the United States, the Supreme Court undermines American democracy under the guise of defending it”

“A 10-year-old girl is raped.

The state forces her to stay pregnant and tells her to consider it an 'opportunity'.

It's not Iran.

It's not Gilead.

It's not hypothetical.

It happened today in Ohio

,” tweeted Gavi Begtrup, an elected Democrat from Ohio.

The

Columbus Dispatch

does not specify under what circumstances this little girl became pregnant, but it was an Ohio child abuse doctor who asked an Indiana gynecologist, Dr. Caitlin Bernard, want to take care of his little patient.

However, by the end of July, this will probably no longer be possible in the latter state, whose legislators must in turn probably ban or severely limit terminations of pregnancy from the end of July.

Read alsoAbortion: Google will delete data on visits to specialized clinics

"It's hard to imagine that in just a few weeks we won't be able to provide this care

," laments Dr. Bernard.

States where abortions are still authorized are currently seeing the number of interventions explode.

The Indianapolis Star

newspaper

reports that the number of abortions performed each day on women from other states has increased from five to eight per day to around twenty since the Supreme Court's decision.

Abortion rights advocates now fear that the most abortion-restrictive states will try to prevent women from traveling to terminate a pregnancy in the future.

Source: lefigaro

All news articles on 2022-07-05

You may like

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.