Hundreds rally in the streets of Paris to support world abortion rights
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[September 30, 2024]
By DIANE JEANTET
PARIS (AP) — Hundreds of people came out in Paris on Saturday, marching
in support of the right to abortion for women across the world, just six
months after France became the first country to guarantee in its
constitution a woman's right to voluntarily terminate a pregnancy.
The protest, organized by civil society groups to mark International
Safe Abortion Day, also called for greater and easier access to abortion
in France, denouncing budget cuts, staff reductions and the closure of
abortion centers and maternity wards, which organizers say all
contribute to penalizing women.
Sarah Durocher, president of France’s not-for-profit family planning
services, said French women sometimes have to travel to another region
to access the medical services needed to abort, denouncing the “obstacle
course” they sometimes face.
Thibault Thomas, 28, said the ongoing trial of a man who has confessed
to drugging his wife so that dozens of men could rape her while she was
unconscious, was one of the reasons that motivated him to attend the
protest on Saturday.
“There’s a mood in France, a particular context with the Mazan trial,”
he said, referring to the name of the small Provence town where the
couple had bought their retirement home, and where the repeated rapes
occurred.
“This sweeps away all the excuses, or all the mitigating circumstances
that we thought could have existed before,” Thomas said. “In fact it is
something broader, generalized.”
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Earlier this year, France became the
only country to explicitly guarantee a woman’s right to voluntarily
terminate a pregnancy, when lawmakers overwhelmingly approved a bill
to enshrine abortion rights in the constitution.
Abortion in France has been legal since 1975 and
enjoys wide support across most of the political spectrum.
Enshrining the right in the Constitution sought to prevent the kind
of rollback seen in the United States in recent years.
Still, many in the protest Saturday said the right to abort could
never be taken for granted, especially at a time when far-right
nationalist parties are gaining influence, in France and other
European countries.
“Every time the far right comes to power, sexual and reproductive
rights are threatened. I don’t see why there would be a French
exception,” said Durocher, stressing that every nine minutes, a
woman dies somewhere in the world for not having been able to access
safe abortion.. “So obviously these rights are threatened.”
Also in the march on Saturday was a small organization representing
Colombian women in Paris, carrying a large purple banner with a
feminist sign.
“In France, fortunately, it is enshrined in the constitution. But we
know that when we exert pressure in France or in Latin America, we
also help all women to say, ‘We are not alone,'" said 49 year-old
Talula Rodríguez. "We’re all going to fight for rights, rights over
our bodies. It’s our choices.”
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