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El Salvador women jailed for 30 years under anti-abortion laws are released
25 December 2021, 18:14
The three women were jailed under the nation’s strict anti-abortion laws after suffering obstetric emergencies, campaigners said.
Three El Salvador women who were jailed for 30 years under the nation’s strict anti-abortion laws after suffering obstetric emergencies have been released, according to campaigners.
Morena Herrera, of the Citizen’s Group for the Depenalisation of Abortion, said that the group was told one woman would be set free under a presidential order but when they went to the prison to greet her, three were released.
“We presented ourselves at the prison in Zacatecoluca and Karen, Kathy and Evelyn left. They are free and in their homes,” Ms Herrera said.
She said she had no additional information about the decision, though she noted that petitions were pending before the Supreme Court to commute the women’s sentences.
The three are among at least 17 Salvadoran women whom activists consider unjustly convicted and imprisoned following obstetric emergencies and who have been at the centre of a campaign against El Salvador’s absolute law against abortions.
Several celebrities — including actresses America Ferrera, Milla Jovovich and Kathryn Hahn — last week asked President Nayib Bukele to let the women return home for Christmas.
“We are grateful that our petitions are being heard and we trust that President Bukele is going to work to achieve freedom for the rest of the innocent women,” said Paula Avila-Guillen, executive director of the Washington-based Women’s Equality Centre.
The Inter-American Court of Human Rights in November ruled that El Salvador’s government had violated the rights of a woman identified as Manuela who was arrested in 2008 on charges of provoking an abortion and died in 2010 while in custody, leaving two children.
El Salvador is among four countries in Latin America that ban abortion in all cases, even when the life of the mother is at risk and in cases of rape.
The others are Nicaragua, Honduras and the Dominican Republic. Charges of homicide are often brought.