Bid
to ease Chile's abortion ban hits roadblock
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[July 21, 2017] SANTIAGO
(Reuters) - Chile's Chamber of Deputies fell one vote short of passing
the Senate version of a bill easing the country's strict abortion law, a
surprise setback to President Michelle Bachelet and abortion rights
advocates.
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The Senate narrowly passed a bill on Wednesday that would legalize
abortion when a woman's life is in danger, when a fetus is unviable
or when a pregnancy results from rape.
On Thursday, the lower chamber - which passed an earlier version of
the bill over a year ago - was expected to approve the modifications
made by the Senate.
That effort failed when one of the more conservative lawmakers in
Bachelet's center-left coalition abstained. Other lawmakers were on
vacation, leaving the government one vote short of the 67 needed for
passage.
Chile is one of only a handful of countries where abortion is
illegal without exception. The ban was put in place during the
closing days of Augusto Pinochet's 1973-1990 dictatorship. Bachelet
pledged reform when she took office for a second time in 2014.
Although Chile is one of Latin America's more socially conservative
countries and the Roman Catholic Church retains significant
influence, opinion polls show about 70 percent of Chileans favor
easing the abortion ban.
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The bill will now go through a messy reconciliation process that
could take weeks. Abortion rights advocates fear the final version
may pass after a change in the composition of Chile's Constitutional
Court scheduled for late August, which is expected to make it more
conservative.
That change could be critical, as the conservative opposition has
pledged to challenge the abortion bill in the court.
"History could have been changed. We just needed one vote to avoid
what happened," center-left lawmaker Marco Antonio Nunez said in
televised remarks.
(Reporting by Antonio de la Jara; Writing by Gram Slattery; Editing
by Peter Cooney)
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