01/14/2021 3:31 PM
Clarín.com
Society
Updated 01/14/2021 3:34 PM
The legal abortion law will be promulgated in Argentina during an act that will be led by President Alberto Fernández at the Casa Rosada Bicentennial Museum, this Thursday from 6.30 pm, when it will meet with referents of the groups that demanded the voluntary interruption of pregnancy , national legislators and the majority of the national cabinet officials.
On December 30, in a session that lasted 12 hours, the senators defined that
abortion, until week 14, will be legal in the country
.
The executive branch's bill was sanctioned by 38 votes in favor, 29 against and one abstention.
In return,
"the judicial and electoral battle"
is the strategy in which the
so-called "pro-life" movement
is organized
to reverse the Voluntary Interruption of Pregnancy Law (IVE).
The Fundación Más Vida (FMV), led by Raúl Magnasco, prepares
an amparo action
before the Federal Contentious Administrative Court, after the law is promulgated by the President of the Nation "because for its admissibility it is necessary that it be firm "says Claudio Venchiarutti, FMV lawyer.
The idea is to present it as
soon as the law is published
.
Why electoral battle?
"Because we are working with the people to raise awareness of the need for
the celestial vote
for a real pro-life representation. As happened the day the law was passed and we achieved the legal status of the Celeste Party,
which allows us to compete in the elections of 2021
and it is one of the actions for which we are also preparing ", explains the lawyer.
Raúl Magnasco and Ayelén Alancay, from Más Vida, along with other militants.
The action will request to the Justice
the unconstitutionality of the norm
, "since in its article 4, the same legitimizes the elimination of the life of human beings in the maternal womb, by simple will of the pregnant woman until week 14 inclusive, and outside of that period, at any time during the pregnancy invoking causes. Such prescriptions violate national and constitutional regulations,
which recognize the right to life from conception
.
"
According to Venchiarutti, also general secretary of the Celeste Party, the national doctrine understands "that
the right to life necessarily emerges from the recognition of the human person
and his dignity as the center of the liberal democracy system. For its part, the Supreme Court emphasized the character of life as the
first natural right
, pre-existing to all positive legislation although recognized in the Constitution and the laws ".
Venchiarutti also added that after the 1994 constitutional reform, the protection of the right to life acquired greater intensity.
"On the one hand, the recognition of
the existence of the human person from conception
, set forth in the Civil Code, entered the constitutionality block due to the hierarchy granted to the American Convention on Human Rights."
Presentation of the blue scarf.
Thus was born the symbol that identifies those who are against legal abortion.
"For this reason - continues the lawyer - Article 4 of the Law of legalization of abortion recently sanctioned and soon to be promulgated,
is incompatible with what is prescribed in the Civil Code, in the National Constitution
and international Human Rights treaties, which would require, for its validity, a constitutional reform. "
Several civil organizations from different provinces will adhere and accompany the judicial initiative of Más Vida.
Nor do they rule out
other presentations by medical organizations
requesting the unconstitutionality of articles related to conscientious objection.
On the other hand, from the team of lawyers of the Fundación Más Vida,
a criminal complaint against the National Government for genocide
is also being prepared
"The state apparatus is promoting the widespread and systematic extermination of innocent human beings through the crime of abortion, now invested with legality. Such a procedure is clearly a state crime," Venchiarutti argues.
AS / DD
Look also
Alberto Fernández promulgates the law of legal abortion in an act at the Bicentennial Museum
Legal abortion: when does it come into effect in Argentina