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Human Rights Law Review 8:2 The Author [2008]. Published by Oxford University Press.

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doi:10.1093/hrlr/ngn008
.......................................................................

Christina Zampas* and Jaime M. Gher**

Abstract
This article focuses on the striking expansion of international and
regional human rights standards and jurisprudence that support
womens human right to abortion. It summarises pertinent developments within the United Nations, European, Inter-American and
African human rights systems regarding abortion, as they relate to
womens rights to life and health, in situations of rape, incest or foetal
impairment, and for abortion based on social and economic reasons
and on request. In doing so, the article touches on charged issues
such as maternal mortality, prohibitions of therapeutic abortion as
infringing on the right to be free from cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment, and state procedural obligations to ensure womens
right to access legal abortion. Finally, the article addresses the growing
recognition by international human rights bodies that criminalisation
of abortion leads women to obtain unsafe abortions, threatening
their lives and health, and recent national-level developments in the
field.

* Senior Regional Manager Legal Adviser for Europe, Center for Reproductive Rights^International
Legal Program, 120 Wall Street, 14th Floor, New York, New York 10005.
** Attorney^Consultant, Center for Reproductive Rights^International Legal Program, 120 Wall
Street, 14th Floor, New York, New York 10005.

...........................................................................
Human Rights Law Review 8:2(2008), 249^294

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Abortion as a Human
RightInternational and
Regional Standards

250

HRLR 8 (2008), 249^294

1. Overview

States Parties shall take all appropriate measures to . . . protect the reproductive rights of women by authorising medical abortion in cases of
sexual assault, rape, incest, and where the continued pregnancy endangers the mental and physical health of the mother or the life of the
mother or the foetus.6
The African Womens Protocol is the only legally binding human rights
instrument that explicitly addresses abortion as a human right and affirms
that womens reproductive rights are human rights.7 At present, 20 African
countries have ratified the Protocol,8 however, the Protocols reach is limited
to the African region and its efficacy has yet to be tested. Nevertheless, there
are other international and regional human rights protections that support
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8

World Health Organization (WHO), Unsafe Abortion: Global and Regional Estimates of Incidence
of and Mortality due to Unsafe Abortion with a Listing of Available Country Data, 3rd edn
(Geneva: WHO, 1997), WHO/RHT/MSM/97.16 at 3^14.
Cook, Dickens and Fathalla, Reproductive Health and Human Rights: Integrating Medicine,
Ethics and Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003) 26.
Alan Guttmacher Institute, Abortion in Context: United States and Worldwide, May 1999,
available at: http://www.guttmacher.org/pubs/ib_0599.html [last accessed 17 September
2007].
Res. AHG/RES.240 (XXXI). The African Womens Protocol entered into force on 25 November
2005 after ratification by 15 African states.
OAU Doc. CAB/LEG/76/3 Rev.5; 21 ILM 58 (1982).
Article 14.2(c), African Womens Protocol.
Article 14, African Womens Protocol.
African Commission on Human and Peoples Rights (ACHPR), List of countries which
have signed, Ratified/Acceded to the African Union Convention on Protocol to the
African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights on the Rights of Women in Africa, available at:
http://www.achpr.org/english/ratifications/ratification_women%20protocol.pdf [last accessed
7 September 2007]. Ratifying countries are: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Comoros,
Djibouti, Gambia, Libya, Lesotho, Mali, Malawi, Mozambique, Mauritania, Namibia, Nigeria,
Rwanda, South Africa, Senegal, Seychelles, Togo and Zambia.

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Every year, at least 70,000 women die from complications related to unsafe
abortions.1 It is further estimated that unsafe abortions account for 13% of
all maternal deaths worldwide and, in some countries, it accounts for 60%
of maternal deaths.2 Research indicates that there is a strong correlation
between abortion legality and abortion safety,3 and thus women living in
countries with restrictive abortion laws often resort to unsafe, clandestine
abortions, jeopardising their lives and health.
As unsafe abortion is increasingly considered a major public health problem, human rights advocacy for abortion has gained greater momentum.
The most explicit pronouncement of womens right to access abortion in
the text of a human rights treaty is found in the Protocol on the Rights of
Women in Africa (African Womens Protocol), adopted by the African Union
on 11 July 2003.4 Intended to fill the gaps of the African Charter on Human
and Peoples Rights 1981 (African Charter),5 the Protocol explicitly states:

Abortion as a human right

251

Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly, Resolution 1607 on access to safe and legal abortion in Europe, 15th sitting, 16 April 2008, available at:
http://assembly.coe.int/
Main.asp?link=/Documents/AdoptedText/ta08/ERES1607.htm [last accessed 8 May 2008].

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womens right to safe, legal abortion. While these protections are less explicit
than the African Womens Protocol, their weight and importance is just the
same. In addition to the right to life and health, womens right to abortion is
bolstered by the broad constellation of human rights that support it, such as
rights to privacy, liberty, physical integrity and non-discrimination. In fact, it
is the evolution of human rights interpretations and applications, stemmed by
increased sophistication, womens empowerment and changing times, which
have given force to womens human right to abortion.
The recent ground-breaking pronouncement regarding womens right to
abortion issued on 16 April 2008 by the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe, representing 47 European states whose mission is, in part,
to protect and promote human rights and democracy in Europe, reflects such
evolution and sophistication. A majority of the parliamentarians adopted a
report issued by the Committee on Equal Opportunities for Women and Men
entitled Access to Safe and Legal Abortion in Europe (the Report). The Report
calls upon Member States to decriminalise abortion, guarantee womens effective exercise of their right to safe and legal abortion, remove restrictions that
hinder de jure and de facto access to abortion, and adopt evidence-based
sexual and reproductive health strategies and policies, such as access to contraception at a reasonable cost and of suitable nature, and compulsory ageappropriate and gender-sensitive sex and relationship education for young
people.9 The adoption of the Report is particularly significant in a region peppered with stark differences within the levels of sexual and reproductive
health laws and policies. While not legally binding, it is the most progressive
pronouncement on the right to abortion by any international or regional
human rights system.
This article summarises pertinent developments within the United Nations
(UN), European, Inter-American and African human rights systems regarding
abortion, as they relate to womens rights to life and health, in situations of
rape, incest or foetal impairment, and for abortion based on social and economic reasons and on request. Notably, a large share of the regional discussion
in this article is devoted to Europe, as there have been substantial developments in that region in response to tightening restrictions in law and practice
on womens access to abortion.
The discussion is organised according to the above-listed categories, which
generally mirror the varying categories to which countries permit abortion, so
as to limit repetition. The article accounts for the significant overlap between
the implicated rights and highlights gaps in protection for womens right
to abortion. Finally, the article touches upon criminalisation of women who

252

HRLR 8 (2008), 249^294

undergo illegal abortions as an independent human rights violation and recent


legal successes expanding the right to abortion at the regional and national levels.

2. Scope of Womens Right to Abortion within


International and Regional Human Rights Law

10
11
12
13
14
15

Cook, Dickens and Fathalla, supra n. 2 at 148.


Ibid. at 148^9.
Report of the International Conference on Population and Development, Cairo, 5^13
September 1994, A/CONF.171/13/Rev.1 (1995), Chapter VIII C. Womens Health and Safe
Motherhood at para. 8.25.
Ibid.
Ibid.
Ibid.

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Promotion of womens reproductive rights has recently gained momentum,


in large part, due to the 1994 International Conference on Population and
Development (ICPD), held in Cairo, and the 1995 Fourth World UN Conference
on Women, held in Beijing.10 Commentators consider that [t]hese two conferences led to the recognition that the protection of reproductive and sexual
health is a matter of social justice, and that the realization of such health can
be addressed through the improved application of human rights contained
in existing national constitutions and regional and international human
rights treaties.11 The consensus statements created at these conferences touch
on womens right to abortion, and thus provide additional support for the
notion that womens reproductive rights are human rights.
With regard to womens right to health, the 1994 ICPD Programme of
Action calls upon governments to contemplate the consequences of unsafe
abortion on womens health, and urges state governments and relevant intergovernmental and non-governmental organisations to strengthen their commitment to womens health, directly address unsafe abortion as a major public
health concern and reduce the incidence of abortion through expanded and
improved family-planning services.12 The Programme of Action also affirms
that women faced with unwanted pregnancies should have expedient access
to reliable information and compassionate counselling.13
Notably, the ICPD Programme of Action confirms that where abortion is
legal, the procedure should be accessible and safe.14 While it does not explicitly
call for legalisation of abortion worldwide, the ICPD Programme of Action confirms that women should have access to quality services for the management
of abortion-related complications, and [p]ost-abortion counselling, education
and family-planning services should be offered promptly, which will also help
to avoid repeat abortions.15 During the five year review of the ICPD
Programme of Actions implementation, country delegates called on health systems to increase womens access to services where abortion is not against

Abortion as a human right

253

16

17

18
19

Vukovich, Key Actions for the Further Implementation of the Programme of Action of the
International Conference on Population and Development (Report of the Ad Hoc Committee
of the Whole of the Twenty-First Special Session of the General Assembly), 1 July 1999,
A/S-21/5/Add.1 at para. 63(iii), available at: www.un.org/popin/unpopcom/32ndsess/gass/
215a1e.pdf [last accessed 21 September 2007].
In this article a significant portion of the analysis of treaty-monitoring bodies functions,
interpretations and jurisprudence, is derived from: Center for Reproductive Rights, Bringing
Rights to Bear: An Analysis of the Work of UN Treaty Monitoring Bodies on Reproductive
and Sexual Rights, 2002, available at: http://www.reproductiverights.org/pdf/pub_bo_tmb_
full.pdf [last accessed 2 October 2007].
Office Of The High Commissioner For Human Rights, Treaty Bodies, 14 February 2002, available at: http://www.unhchr.ch/pdf/leafletontreatybodies.pdf [last accessed 21 September
2007].
Much of the research on Concluding Observations from Treaty Monitoring Bodies comes from
Bringing Rights to Bear, supra n. 17.

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the law by training and equipping health-care providers and taking other measures to safeguard womens health.16 While international consensus documents are non-binding, the statements contained in these documents are
persuasive and indicative of the world communitys growing support for reproductive rights, and are often used to support legislative and policy reform, as
well as interpretations of national and international law.
Treaty-monitoring bodies interpretations and jurisprudence have also
played a large role in advancing womens reproductive rights.17 The UN
treaty-monitoring system acts to ensure state compliance with international
treaty obligations.18 Each of the major international human rights treaties
establishes a Committee to monitor compliance with it. The Committees issue
General Comments or General Recommendations on an as-needed basis,
to elaborate on the treaties broadly worded human rights guarantees and
to help states understand their obligations under various treaty provisions.
The Committees also facilitate a country reporting process. This process
requires states to report periodically on their efforts to respect, protect and
fulfil the human rights enshrined in a particular treaty. Following dialogues
with government representatives, Committee members issue Concluding
Observations to the reporting government. Concluding Observations provide
a mechanism through which Committees apply the overall human rights
standards developed in General Comments and General Recommendations.
Although Committees are not judicial bodies and their Concluding Observations are not legally binding, the increasingly comprehensive quality of the
Concluding Observations on the subject of reproductive rights has
enormous potential to influence national laws and policies. When taken
together and analysed, the Committees General Comments and Concluding
Observations may be considered a type of jurisprudence or collective work
guiding the development and application of human rights both at the national
level and at the international level.19 Some Committees also have a mandate
to examine individual complaints of human rights violations and issue written
decisions in such cases.

254

HRLR 8 (2008), 249^294

20
21
22

23
24

25
26

ETS No. 5. See Council of Europe, About the Council of Europe, available at: http://
www.coe.int/T/e/Com/about_coe/ [last accessed 21 September 2007].
Declaration of Santiago, Final Act of the Fifth meeting of Consultation of Foreign Minister,
Res. VI, OEA/SER.C/11.5 (1959) at 10^11.
Inter-American Institute on Human Rights (IIHR) and Latin American and Caribbean
Committee for the Defense of Womens Rights (CLADEM) (eds), Proteccion Internacional de los
Derechos Humanos de las Mujeres, Papers from the proceedings of a conference held in San
Jose, Costa Rica, April 1997 (Portada de la Editorial Farben, 1997) at 150. See also American
Convention on Human Rights 1969, OAS Treaty Series No. 36, OEA/Ser.L.V/II.23, doc. 21, rev.
6 (American Convention), which entered into force on 18 July 1978.
Supra n. 22 at 150.
ACHPR, African Commission on Human and Peoples Rights, Establishment ^ Information
Sheet No. 1 (African Commission-Information Sheet), available at: http://www.achpr.org/english/information_sheets/ACHPR%20 inf.%20sheet%20no.1.doc [last accessed 21 September
2007].
Article 62, African Charter.
African Commission ^ Information Sheet, supra n. 24. A communication can also be made by
a State Party that reasonably believes that another State Party has violated any of the
Charters provisions.

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Similar to the UN system, regional human rights systems monitor states


compliance with regional human rights treaties. The Council of Europe
adopted the European Convention on the Protection of Human Rights and
Fundamental Freedoms (ECHR)20 in 1950, which in turn created the
European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). The ECtHR is authorised to hear
interstate complaints and alleged individual human rights violations under
the ECHR. Similarly, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights
(Inter-American Commission) was created in 1959 to be the primary human
rights organ of the Organization of American States.21 With the adoption of
the American Convention on Human Rights (American Convention) in 1969,
the Inter-American Commission was granted the legal authority to issue
recommendations regarding alleged American Convention violations.22 The
American Convention also created the Inter-American Court on Human
Rights (Inter-American Court), to interpret the Convention and hear individual
cases following their consideration by the Inter-American Commission and
give legally binding judgments in those cases.23
Finally, the African Commission on Human and Peoples Rights (ACHPR)
was established under the African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights
(African Charter), which was adopted in 1981, by the Organisation of African
Unity (now the African Union).24 The ACHPR ensures the protection and
promotion of human rights throughout Africa. Under the African Charter,
States Parties are called upon to submit, on a biennial basis, a report on the
measures they have taken to give effect to the rights and freedoms recognised
and guaranteed by Charter.25 The ACHPR then issues corresponding reports
evaluating the Member States compliance with the African Charter.
The African Charter also created a communication procedure, through
which the Commission can be petitioned to assess alleged violations.26 More
recently, the African Court on Human and Peoples Rights was created to

Abortion as a human right

255

A. Abortion to Save a Womans Life


(i) International human rights parametersthe womans right to life
Some pregnancies and their related complications can place womens lives at
grave risk. It is estimated that at least 70,000 women worldwide die each year
as a consequence of unsafe abortion, and 5.3 million suffer temporary or permanent disability.28 Restrictive or criminal abortion legislation also jeopardises
womens lives by compelling women to obtain dangerous clandestine abortions.
While there has been a worldwide trend towards liberalising restrictive abortion laws,29 maternal mortality and morbidity due to unsafe abortion
27
28
29

Beyani, A Human Rights Court for Africa, (2005) 15 Interights Bulletin 1.


WHO, supra n. 1.
Center for Reproductive Rights, The Worlds Abortion Laws, available at: http://www.
reproductiverights.org/pub_fac_abortion_laws.html [last accessed 30 August 2007].

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complement the ACHPR by interpreting and applying the African Charter and
to give legally binding judgments in individual cases, which will, bolster
womens rights under the African Charter and its Womens Protocol.27 At present, there is not a regional human rights monitoring system in Asia.
Despite progress made by treaty-monitoring bodies regarding reproductive
rights, to date no such body has explicitly recognised womens right to
abortion on request or for economic and social reasons, nor have they explicitly called for the legalisation of abortion on those grounds. The extent to
which womens right to abortion is currently protected under human rights
law generally hinges on whether a womans life or health is at risk, the pregnancy resulted from rape or incest or there is risk of foetal impairment.
In these contexts, significant progress has recently been made within international and regional human rights discourses requesting States Parties
to liberalise abortion laws and actualise womens right to safe abortion services. The recognition by treaty-monitoring bodies that restrictive abortion
laws may force women to seek illegal, and hence, unsafe abortions which
threaten their lives, can be used by advocates to support abortion on request
or for socio-economic reasons.
Notwithstanding protection for womens right to abortion in the above-listed
contexts, a constellation of human rights, including the rights to privacy, liberty,
physical integrity, non-discrimination and health, support the notion that abortion on request is a human right. While international and regional human
rights treaties and treaty-monitoring bodies have yet to directly address the
issue of abortion on request, there is strong textual and interpretive support for
the above-listed related rights which have been used by national legislatures
and courts around the world to guarantee a womans right to abortion, and
which can be used by advocates to promote womens right to abortion on request.

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HRLR 8 (2008), 249^294

International covenant on civil and political rights


The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights 1966 (ICCPR)31 provides an explicit pronouncement of the right to life. Article 6(1) of the ICCPR
states that: Every human being has the inherent right to life. The Human
Rights Committee (HRC), the ICCPRs interpretive body, emphasises in General
Comment No. 6 (right to life), that the inherent right to life should not be
understood in a restrictive manner.32 General Comment No. 6 requires States
Parties to take positive measures to ensure the right to life, particularly measures to increase life expectancy.33 Additionally, the HRCs General Comment
No. 28 on equality of rights between men and women, asks States Parties,
when reporting on the right to life protected by Article 6, to give information
on any measures taken by the State to help women prevent unwanted pregnancies, and to ensure that they do not have to undergo life-threatening clandestine abortions.34 General Comment No. 28 also considers laws or policies
where States impose a legal duty upon doctors and other health personnel to
report cases of women who have undergone abortion, a potential violation of
the right to life (Article 6) and the right torture or to cruel, inhuman or
degrading treatment or punishment (Article 7).35
The HRCs Concluding Observations also provide strong support for womens
right to access abortion and, in particular circumstances, impose duties on
States Parties to take affirmative steps to realise womens right to life in the
context of abortion. For example, the Committee has made the link between

30
31
32
33
34
35

IPAS, Abortion ban saga continues in Nicaragua, 22 November 2006, available at: http://
www.ipas.org/Library/News/News_Items/Abortion_ban_saga_continues_in_Nicaragua.aspxht=
[last accessed 25 September 2007].
999 UNTS 171, which entered into force on 23 March 1976.
HRC, General Comment No. 6: Article 6 (Right to life), in Compilation of General Comments
and General Recommendations Adopted by Human Rights Treaty Bodies, HRI/GEN/1/Rev. 7
(2004) (Compilation of General Comments) at 128.
Ibid. at 129, para. 5.
HRC, General Comment No. 28: Article 3 (Equality of rights between men and women), in
Compilation of General Comments supra n. 32 at 179, para. 10.
Ibid. at 181, para. 20.

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continues to be a major public health concern. At present, Chile, El Salvador


and Nicaragua have legislation eliminating all exceptions to the countries
abortion prohibitions, even when a womans life is at risk, thus giving women
no recourse when their lives are imperilled during pregnancy.30 Furthermore,
a persistent foetal rights movement has emerged asserting that foetuses are
entitled to a right to life at the expense of womens human rights. Advocates
can rely upon the below discussed international and regional human rights
treaty provisions and their interpretations, to reject foetal rights claims and to
ultimately safeguard womens right to access abortion.

Abortion as a human right

257

36

37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48

Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding: Chile, 30 March 1999, CCPR/C/79/Add.104 at


para. 15; Colombia, 1 April 1997, CCPR/C/79/Add.76 at para. 24; Ecuador, 18 August 1998,
CCPR/C/79/Add.92 at para. 11; Guatemala, 27 August 2001, CCPR/CO/72/GTM at para. 19;
Mali, 16 April 2003, CCPR/CO/77/MLI at para. 14; Mongolia, 25 May 2000, CCPR/C/79/
Add.120 at para. 8(b); Peru, 15 November 2000, CCPR/CO/70/PER at para. 20; Poland, 29
July 1999, CCPR/C/79/Add.110 at para. 11; and United Republic of Tanzania, 18 August 1998,
CCPR/C/79/Add.97 at para. 15.
Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding: Mali, 16 April 2003, CCPR/CO/77/MLI at para.
14; and Poland, 2 December 2004, CCPR/CO/82/POL at para. 8.
Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding El Salvador, 22 August 2003, CCPR/CO/78/SLV
at para. 14.
Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding; Chile, 18 May 2007, CCPR/C/CHL/CO/5 at
para. 8; and Madagascar, 11 May 2007, CCPR/C/MDG/CO/3 at para. 14.
Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding: Mauritius, 27 April 2005, CCPR/CO/83.MUS
at para. 9; and Venezuela, 26 April 2001, CCPR/CO/71/VEN at para. 19.
Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding Gambia, 12 August 2004, CCPR/CO/75/GMB
at para. 17.
Peru, supra n. 36 at para. 20.
Venezuela, supra n. 40.
Mali, supra n. 36.
Ecuador, supra. n. 36. For further discussion of the threat of suicide as a potential risk to life
and thus a viable exception to abortion prohibitions, see infra section 2(A)(ii) European
System.
Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding: Chile, 18 May 2007, CCPR/C/CHL/CO/5 at
para. 8; El Salvador, 22 August 2003, CCPR/CO/78/SLV at para. 14; Madagascar, 11 May 2007,
CCPR/C/MDG/CO/3 at para. 14; and Poland, 2 December 2004, CCPR/CO/82/POL at para. 8.
Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding: Chile, 18 May 2007, CCPR/C/CHL/CO/5 at
para. 8; and Madagascar, 11 May 2007, CCPR/C/MDG/CO/3 at para. 14.
Chile and El Salvador, supra n. 46.

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illegal and unsafe abortions and high rates of maternal mortality.36 The HRC
has further noted that illegal abortions have serious harmful consequences
for womens lives, health37 and well-being.38
The HRC has expressed particular concern for restrictive abortion laws,
especially when womens lives are at risk.39 More specifically, the HRC has
expressed concern regarding the criminalisation of abortion,40 even when the
pregnancy is the result of rape,41 and confirmed that such legislation is incompatible with womens right to life under Article 6.42 In that regard, the HRC
has recommended that States Parties adopt measures to guarantee the right
to life for women who decide to terminate their pregnancies,43 including
ensuring the accessibility of health services and emergency obstetric care.44
In the HRCs 1998 Concluding Observations to Ecuador, it linked the high
rate of suicide among adolescent girls and the restrictions on abortion to find
this to be incompatible with adolescents right to life, and recommended that
the State Party adopt all legislative and other measures, including increasing
access to adequate health and education facilities, to address the problem.45
The HRC has also called upon States Parties to amend restrictive abortion
laws to help women avoid unwanted pregnancies and unsafe abortions,46 and
to bring laws in line with the ICCPR,47 specifically Article 6 (right to life).48
For example, the HRCs 2004 Concluding Observation to Poland expressed
deep concern regarding the State Partys restrictive abortion law that

258

HRLR 8 (2008), 249^294

Convention on the elimination of all forms of discrimination against women


The International Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of
Discrimination Against Women 1979 (ICEDAW) does not explicitly confer the
right to life; however, the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination
Against Women (CEDAW) has addressed how issues concerning abortion
impact womens health and life, and, ultimately, womens equality.56 For example, CEDAW has recognised the inextricable link between womens right to
health during pregnancy and childbirth, and their right to life in its General
Recommendation No. 24 on women and health.57 CEDAW explained that provision of reproductive health services is essential to womens equality and that
it is discriminatory for a State Party to refuse to provide legally for the performance of certain reproductive health services for women.58
With respect to abortion, CEDAW has given considerable attention to the
issue of maternal mortality as a result of unsafe abortions,59 and explicitly
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59

Poland, supra n. 46.


Ibid.
Chile and Guatemala, supra n. 36.
Ecuador, supra n. 36.
Chile and Guatemala, supra n. 36.
Chile, supra n. 36.
Guatemala, supra n. 36.
1249 UNTS 13.
Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women, General Recommendation
24: Article 12 of the Convention (Women and Health), in Compilation of General Comments
supra n. 32 at 280, para. 27 (CEDAW ^ General Rec. 24).
Ibid. at 276, para. 11.
Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding: Azerbaijan, 14 May 1998, A/53/38/Rev.1 at 10,
para. 73; Belize, 1 July 1999, A/54/38 at para. 56; Burundi, 2 February 2001, A/56/38 at para.
61; Colombia, 4 February 1999, A/54/38 at para. 393; Georgia, 1 July 1999, A/54/38 at para.

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. . . incite[s] women to seek unsafe, illegal abortions, with attendant risks to


their life and health.49 The HRC focussed on the lack of accessibility of abortion in Poland, even when the law permits it, due to lack of information and
the use of conscientious objection by medical practitioners, and advised
Poland to liberalise its legislation and practice on abortion.50
To reduce the rate of abortion and address the prevalence of unsafe
abortion, the HRC has recommended increased access to family planning services51 and education.52 The HRC has also expressly referenced States Parties
duty to protect all persons lives, including women who decide to terminate their
pregnancies.53 For example, the HRC recommended that Chile amend its ban on
abortion to include exceptions.54 The Committee similarly recommended that
Guatemala provide the necessary information and resources to guarantee
womens right to life, and incorporate additional exceptions to the countrys
abortion law that only permits abortion where a womans life is at risk.55

Abortion as a human right

259

Convention on the rights of the child


Article 6 of the International Convention on the Rights of the Child 1989
(ICRC), protects childrens right to life and survival.69 The Committee on the

60
61

62

63

64
65
66
67

68
69

111; Kyrgyzstan, 27 January 1999, A/54/38 at para. 136; Mongolia, 2 February 2001, A/56/38
at para. 273; Myanmar, 28 January 2000, A/55/38 at para. 129; Nepal, 1 July 1999, A/54/38 at
para. 147; Nicaragua, 31 July 2001, A/56/38 at paras 300^1; Peru, 8 July 1998, A/53/38/Rev.1
at 73 and 75, paras 300 and 339; Romania, 23 June 2000, A/55/38 at para. 314; and
Zimbabwe, 14 May 1998, A/53/38/Rev.1 at 16, para. 159.
Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding; Belize, 1 July 1999, A/54/38 at para. 56;
Colombia, 5 February 1999, A/54/38 at para. 393; and Dominican Republic, 14 May 1998,
A/53/38 at para. 337.
Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding: Chile, 9 July 1999, A/54/38 at paras 209 and
228; Greece, 1 February 1999, A/54/38 at para. 207; Hungary, 9 May 1996, A/51/38 at
para. 254; Lithuania, 16 June 2000, A/55/38 at para. 158; Ukraine, 9 May 1996, A/51/38 at
para. 287; and Georgia and Mongolia, supra n. 59.
Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding; Burundi, 2 February 2001, A/56/38 at
para. 62; Chile, 9 July 1999, A/54/38 at para. 229; Chile, 25 August 2006, CEDAW/C/CHI/CO/
at para. 20; Georgia, 1 July 1999, A/54/38 at para. 112; Greece, 1 February 1999, A/54/38 at
para. 208; Ireland, 1 July 1999, A/54/38 at para. 186; Kazakhstan, 2 February 2001, A/56/38
at paras 76 and 106; Lithuania, 16 June 2000, A/55/38 at para. 159; Mongolia, 2 February
2001, A/56/38 at para. 274; Nicaragua, 31 July 2001, A/56/38 at para. 301; and Slovenia,
12 August 1997, A/52/38/Rev.1 at para. 119.
Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding: Burkina Faso, 31 January 2000, A/55/38 at
para. 275; Luxembourg, 12 August 1997, A/52/38/Rev.1, Part II at para. 221; Myanmar,
28 January 2000, A/55/38 at para. 130; and Slovenia, 12 August 1997, A/52/38/Rev.1 at
para. 119.
Chile, 25 August 2006, supra n. 62.
Ibid.
Burkina Faso, supra n. 63 at para. 276.
Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding: Andorra, 31 July 2001, A/56/38 at para. 48;
Belize, 1 July 1999, A/54/38 at para. 57; Cameroon, 26 June 2000, A/55/38 at para. 60; Chile,
25 August 2006, CEDAW/C/CHI/CO/4 at paras 19-20; Colombia, 4 February 1999, A/54/38 at
para. 394; Ireland, 1 July 1999, A/54/38 at para. 186; Jordan, 27 January 2000, A/55/38 at
para. 181; Nepal, 1 July 1999, A/54/38 at paras 139 and 148; Panama, 2 July 1998, A/55/38/
Rev.1 at para. 201; Peru, 8 July 1998, A/53/38/Rev.1 at para. 340; Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines, 12 August 1997,A/52/38/Rev.1 at para. 148; and United Kingdom, 1 July 1999,
A/55/38 at para. 310.
Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding; Belgium, 9 May 1996, A/51/38 at para. 181.
1249 UNTS 13, which entered into force on 2 September 1990.

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framed the issue as a violation of womens right to life.60 For example, CEDAW
consistently makes the important point that lack of access to contraceptive
methods and family planning services, as well as restrictive abortion laws,
tend to correspond with the high prevalence of unsafe abortions, which in
turn, contributes to high rates of maternal mortality.61 To this end, CEDAW
has recommended that States Parties increase access to family planning programmes and services,62 especially to reduce the number of unsafe abortions63
and maternal mortality rates.64 CEDAW has also recommended making a
range of contraceptives and family planning methods more affordable65 and
providing social security coverage for abortion procedures.66 Finally, CEDAW
has asked States Parties to review legislation making abortion illegal67 and
has praised States Parties for amending their restrictive legislation.68

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HRLR 8 (2008), 249^294

International covenant on economic, social and cultural rights


The International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights 1966
(ICESCR) does not explicitly confer the right to life, but the Committee on
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR) has repeatedly expressed concern regarding the relationship between high rates of maternal mortality and
illegal, unsafe, clandestine abortions.75 The CESCR has thus called upon
States Parties to take remedial measures to address the problems of unwanted
pregnancies, clandestine abortions and high maternal mortality rates,76 and

70
71

72
73
74
75

76

Committee on the Rights of the Child, General Comment No. 4; Adolescent health and development in the context of the Convention on the Rights of the Child, in Compilation of
General Comments, supra n. 32 at 328, para. 27 (CRC ^ General Comment No. 4).
Ibid. Note, the CRC has also expressed concern within its Concluding Observations regarding
sex-selective abortions and female infanticide: see China, 24 November 2005, CRC/C/CHN/
CO/2 at para. 28; India, 26 February 2004, CRC/C/15/Add.228 at para. 33, and recommended
States Parties implement existing legislation prohibiting such practices and taking additional
measures such as imposing sanctions to end such practices. See Concluding Observations of
the CRC regarding: China, 24 November 2005, CRC/C/CHN/CO/2 at para. 29; and India, 26
February 2004, CRC/C/15/Add.228 at para. 34. The CRC has not, however, addressed the complex intersection between curbing sex-selective abortion practices and promoting womens
abortion rights, or specifically, called for States Parties to safeguard womens abortion rights
when seeking to eradicate sex-selective abortion.
Concluding Observations of the CRC regarding: Chad, 24 August 1999, CRC/C/15/Add.107 at
para. 30; Colombia, 16 October 2000, CRC/C/15/Add.137 at para. 48; Guatemala, 9 July 2001,
CRC/C/15/Add.154 at para. 40; and Nicaragua, 24 August 1999, CRC/C/15/Add.108 at para. 35.
Concluding Observations of the CRC regarding: Chad, 24 August 1999, CRC/C/15/Add.107 at
para. 30; and Guatemala, 9 July 2001, CRC/C/15/Add.154 at para. 40.
Chad, ibid.
993 UNTS 3, which entered into force on 23 January 1976. See Concluding Observations of
the CESCR regarding: Mexico, 9 June 2006, E/C.12/MEX/CO/4 at para. 25; Nepal, 24
September 2001, E/C.12/1/Add.66 at para. 32; Panama, 24 September 2001, E/C.12/1/Add.64
at para. 20; Poland, 16 June 1998, E/C.12/1/Add.26 at para. 12; Senegal, 24 September 2001,
E/C.12/1/Add.62 at para. 26; and Spain, 7 June 2003, E/C.12/1/Add.99 at para. 22.
Concluding Observations of the CESCR regarding: Nepal, 24 September 2001, E/C.12/1/Add.66
at para. 55; and Poland, 19 December 2002, E/C.12/1/Add.82 at para. 51.

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Rights of the Child (CRC) has expressed repeated concern over adolescent girls
access to safe abortion services and the need for states parties to . . . provide
access to sexual and reproductive health services, including . . . safe
abortion services.70 The CRC has also urged States Parties to provide safe
abortion services where abortion is not against the law, in its General
Comment No. 4 on adolescent health and development.71 Further, the CRC has
linked unsafe abortion to high maternal mortality rates,72 and expressed concern over the impact of punitive legislation on maternal mortality.73 In that
regard, the CRC has specifically recommended that a state party undertake a
study of the negative impact of early pregnancy and illegal abortion.74

Abortion as a human right

261

to permit or consider permitting abortion for therapeutic reasons,77 and when


pregnancies are life threatening or a result of rape or incest.78
(ii) Regional human rights parametersthe womans right to life
In addition to international human rights obligations, advocates can rely on
regional human rights parameters to advocate on behalf of womens right
to access abortion.

The right to life protections under Article 2 of the European Convention on


Human Rights (ECHR)79 confer both substantive and procedural obligations.
As to the substantive obligations, Article 2 requires Member States to avoid
taking actions to intentionally deprive individuals lives. As to the procedural
obligations, Article 2 requires Member States to provide an effective official
investigation when an individual dies due to acts by state agents,80 and in the
context of health care, requires medical institutions to have regulations for
the protection of patients lives and an effective system to determine the cause
of death which occurs in a hospital and which may pose civil and/or criminal
liability.81 Thus, even if the ECtHR finds no substantive violation for a loss of
life, it may find a procedural violation. At present, the ECtHR has not heard a
case where a woman was denied an abortion when her life was under threat
based on application of a Member States abortion law. The ECtHR has also
77
78
79

Concluding Observations of the CESCR regarding: Chile, 1 December 2004, E/C.12/1/Add.105


at para. 53; Malta, 14 December 2004, E/C.12/1/Add.101 at para. 41; and Monaco, 13 June
2006, E/C.12/MCO/CO/1 at para. 23.
Concluding Observations of the CESCR regarding: Chile, 1 December 2004, E/C.12/1/Add.105
at para. 53; Malta, 14 December 2004, E/C.12/1/Add.101 at para. 41; Monaco, 13 June 2006, E/
C.12/MCO/CO/1 at para. 23; and Nepal, 24 September 2001, E/C.12/1/Add.66 at para. 55.
Article 2 of the ECHR provides:
Everyones right to life shall be protected by law. No one shall be deprived of his life
intentionally save in the execution of a sentence of a court following his conviction of
a crime for which this penalty is provided by law.

80

81

Note that the European Commission on Human Rights (EComHR) interpreted this right as not
only requiring State Parties to prevent intentional killing, but to also take necessary affirmative measures to protect life against unintentional loss. See Cook, Dickens, and Fathalla,
supra n. 2 at 161, citing Tavares v France, Application No. 16593/90, EComHR, Report of 12
September 1991, which was declared inadmissible on technical grounds. While the ECtHR
now has the sole role of interpreting and applying the ECHR, prior Commission statements
and decisions are persuasive.
Krzyanowska-Mierzewska, How to Use the European Convention for the Protection of Human
Rights and Fundamental Freedoms in Matters of Reproductive Law: The Case Law of the European
Court of Human Rights, (Astra, 2004) at Part III.1, available at: http://www.astra.org.pl/astra_
guide.htm [last accessed 9 September 2007].
Tavares v France, supra n. 79.

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European system

262

HRLR 8 (2008), 249^294

never confirmed whether threat of suicide is equivalent to a threat to life, in


the context of reviewing a Member States abortion law.82
Protections under Article 2 of the ECHR will be addressed at greater length,
under the sections addressing claims of foetal rights and abortion to preserve
a womans health.

African system

B. Foetal ClaimsRight to Life


In some instances, those opposing abortion have attempted to co-opt right to
life protections set forth within international and regional human rights law
to assert that foetuses are similarly accorded a right to life. These assertions
are incompatible with womens fundamental human rights to life, health and
autonomy, by imposing involuntary motherhood on to women and, in essence,
requiring women to jeopardise their own lives for the lives of their future
children. Nevertheless, as demonstrated subsequently, such contentions have
been defeated on various occasions within both international and regional
human rights forums.
(i) International human rights parameters
Historical analyses of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights 1948
(UDHR),85 ICCPR and ICRCthe major international human rights treaties
conferring the right to lifeconfirm that that right does not extend to foetuses. As the first pronouncement of the right to life, Article 3 of the UDHR
82

83
84
85

Recently, the ECtHR referenced the Irish Supreme Court decision Attorney General v X, which
held a pregnant teenagers suicidal tendencies to be a real and substantial risk to life under
Irelands life exception to the constitutional abortion ban, in the case D. v Ireland, to assert
that Irelands Constitutional Court has the potential to develop the parameters of the Irish
abortion law, thus requiring the exhaustion of domestic remedies. See D. v Ireland (2006) 43
EHRR SE16 at paras 88^103. See also Attorney General v X [1992] 2 CMLR 277.
Article 14.2 (c), African Womens Protocol.
Ibid.
GA Res. 217A(III), 10 December 1948.

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The African Womens Protocol is the only international human rights instrument to explicitly pronounce, in the text of the instrument, womens right to
access abortion when pregnancy endangers the . . . life of the mother or the
foetus.83 While some African states permit abortion to save a womans life,
the Protocol calls upon ratifying States to take a step further and extend the
right to women whose lives are endanger[ed] by pregnancy.84 This permissive,
unqualified language represents a significant expansion of womens right to
access abortion in Africa.

Abortion as a human right

263

86
87

88

89
90
91
92
93

GA OR 3rd Comm., A/PV/99 (1948) at 110^124.


GA OR Annex, 12th session (1957), Agenda Item 33 at 96, A/C.3/L.654 at para. 113. The
Commission on Human Rights ultimately voted to adopt Article 6, which has no reference
to conception, by a vote of 55 to nil, with 17 abstentions: see GAOR, 12th Session, Agenda
Item 33, A/3764 (1957) at 119(q).
Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding: Argentina, CCPR/CO/70/ARG (2000) at para.
14; Costa Rica, CCPR/C/79/Add.107 (1999) at para. 11; United Republic of Tanzania, CCPR/C/
79/Add.97 (1998) at para. 15; Venezuela, CCPR/CO/71/VEN (2001) at para. 19; and Poland,
CCPR/CO/82/POL (2004) at para. 8.
Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding: Ecuador, 18 August 1998, CCPR/C/79/Add.92
at para. 11; Mongolia, 25 April 2000, CCPR/C/79/Add.120 at para. 8(b); and Poland, 29 July
1999, CCPR/C/79/Add.110 at para. 11.
CRC, supra n. 69.
Ibid. at Preamble, para. 9.
Commission on Human Rights, Question of a Convention on the Rights of a Child: Report of
the Working Group, 10 March 1980, E/CN.4/L/1542.
Ibid.

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specifically limits that right to those who have been born. In fact, the term
born was intentionally used to exclude the foetus or any other antenatal application of human rights. This is confirmed by the fact that a proposed amendment to remove the term and protect the right to life from the moment of
conception, was denied.86 Therefore, in the context of abortion, the UDHR
limits the right to life to women and girls.
Similar to the UDHR, the ICCPR rejects the proposition that the right to life
attaches before birth. The ICCPRs negotiation history indicates that an amendment was proposed and rejected which stated: the right to life is inherent in
the human person from the moment of conception, this right shall be protected
by the law.87 The HRC has also repeatedly called upon States Parties to liberalise criminal abortion laws,88 a position that is discordant with any purported
right to life for foetuses.89
Along similar lines, the ICRCs travaux pre paratoires and its interpretation
by the CRC confirm, that the ICRCs protections concerning life begin at
birth.90 Arguments to the contrary have been made based on Paragraph 9 of
the ICRCs preamble which states: Bearing in mind that, as indicated in the
Declaration of the Rights of the Child, the child, by reason of his physical and
mental immaturity, needs special safeguards and care, including appropriate
legal protection, before as well as after birth.91 At most, this language recognises a states duty to promote a childs capacity to survive and thrive after
birth, by targeting the pregnant womans nutrition and health.
The ICRCs travaux actually confirm that the pre-natal language is not
intended to infringe on any womens right to access abortion. Notably, the
ICRCs initial draft did not contain the before as well as after birth language,
which was subsequently added as an amendment proposed by The Holy See.92
When proposing the amendment, The Holy See clarified that the purpose of
the amendment was not to preclude the possibility of abortion.93 The ICRCs
Working Group also confirmed the amendments limited nature when stating

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HRLR 8 (2008), 249^294

that the Working Group [does] not intend to prejudice the interpretation of
Article 1 or any other provision of the Convention by States Parties.94
Therefore, the focus of the preambles language is on the child, as defined
under the ICRC as every human being below the age of eighteen years[,] and
not a foetus.95 Finally, the CRC implies within its Concluding Observations,
that the definition of a child, for the purposes of the ICRC, does not include a
foetus. As such, the CRC has never applied Article 6s protections to foetuses.

Foetal rights to life have also been vetted within the regional human rights
systems, through cases brought before the EHRC and the Inter-American
Commission.

European system
Foetal claims to the right to life brought to the European human rights system
have largely been ineffective. As noted before, there are substantive and procedural elements to the right to life (Article 2) under the ECHR. When foetal
rights claims have been asserted based on Article 2s substantive protections,
the ECHR bodies repeatedly conclude that foetuses do not enjoy an absolute
right to life. For example, the European Commission of Human Rights
(EComHR) confirmed in Paton v United Kingdom, that the use of the term
everyone in Article 2, protecting the right to life, does not include
foetuses, although it left open the question whether the right to life in
Article 2 might cover the life of the foetus, with implied limitations.96 The
husband-applicant in Paton asserted that his pregnant wife should be prevented from aborting the foetus based on the foetus right life under Article 2.
The EComHR dismissed the complaint and confirmed that a foetus potential
right to life did not outweigh the interests of the pregnant woman since
the foetus is intimately connected with and cannot be isolated from, the life
of the pregnant woman.97 The EComHR went on to say that: If Article 2 were
held to cover the foetus and its protections under this Article were, in the
absence of any express limitation, seen as absolute, an abortion would have to
be considered as prohibited even where the continuance of the pregnancy
94

95
96
97

UN Commission on Human Rights, Report of the Working Group on a Draft Convention on the
Rights of the Child, E/CN.4/1989/48 (1989) at p. 10, as cited in LeBlanc, The Convention on the
Rights of the Child: United Nations Lawmaking on Human Rights (Lincoln: University of
Nebraska Press, 1995) 69 (quoted in Ibegbu, Rights of the Unborn in International Law
(Lewiston NY: E Mellen Press, 2000) at 145 and 146^7.
Article 1, ICRC.
Paton v United Kingdom (X v United Kingdom) (1980) 19 DR 244; (1981) 3 EHRR 48 at paras 7^
9 and 23.
Ibid. at paras 7^9 and 19.

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(ii) Regional human rights parameters

Abortion as a human right

265

98
99
100
101

Ibid. at para. 19.


Boso v Italy 2002-VII 99.
Ibid.
Hewson, Dancing on the Head of a Pin? Foetal Life and the European Convention, (2005)
13 Feminist Legal Studies 363 at 372.
102 Vo v France (2005) 40 EHRR 12 at para. 80.
103 Ibid. at paras 80 and 82. See also Gregoire Loiseau,Histoire dune vie volee: le foetus nest pas
une personne, Droit et patrumone, November 2001, chron. Droits des personnes, p. 99, summarising the 2001 case. The Cour de Cassation confirmed that a human being is a biological
concept in France, and human beingsare understood to exist from the beginning of life, generally considered as conception, although there is no firm agreement on when life begins.
On the other hand, the term person is a legal term that is attached to a legal category
whose rights takes effect and are perfected by birth, although in certain circumstances the
rights acquired at birth will be retroactive to conception. The decision was based on the
distinction made in French law between the concepts of human being and person, which
scholars assert is deeply founded in principles of French civil law: ibid.

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would involve a serious risk to the life of the pregnant women[,]and this would
mean that the unborn life of the foetus would be more regarded as of higher
value than the life of the pregnant woman.98 By making this statement, the
EComHR implied that the rights and interests of the womans right to life take
precedence over the interests of the foetus.
A similar claim was brought in Boso v Italy, when the ECtHR found that the
contested abortion was not in breach of Article 2. It was performed under
Italian law which permitted an abortion in the first 12 weeks to protect the
womans physical or mental health. This law struck a fair balance between
the womans interest and the states interest in protecting the foetus.99 Boso
highlights the ECtHRs tendency to analyse abortion from a view of health,
regardless of the nature of an applicants substantive claims. For example,
while Boso alleged that his partners abortion constituted an Article 2 violation, the ECtHR rejected the applicants claim based partially on the fact that
Italys abortion law protects the health of pregnant women.100 Notably, each
of the abortion laws at issue in these cases were fairly liberal. It is unclear
whether the ECtHR would accord similar deference to Member States with
more restrictive abortion laws.
While the ECtHR has affirmed that foetuses do not enjoy an absolute right
to life, the Court has failed to unequivocally state whether Article 2s protections apply to foetuses, and in turn, avoided drawing any conclusion that may
adversely affect Member States abortion laws.101 The ECtHR was asked for the
first time, in Vo v France, to squarely determine whether foetuses enjoy the
right to life under Article 2.102 While the ECtHR reaffirmed its jurisprudence
on abortion laws which recognise that the unborn child is not regarded as
a person directly protected by Article 2 of the Convention, and that if the
unborn do have a right to life, it is implicitly limited by the mothers rights
and interests, it avoided explicitly confirming whether Article 2 applied to foetuses by noting that, there is no European consensus on the scientific and
legal definition of the beginning of life. 103

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HRLR 8 (2008), 249^294

104 Vo v France, supra n. 102 at para. 48.


105 Ibid. at paras 84, 89 and 92^3.
106 Hewson, supra n. 101 at 372. Note, the ECtHRs failure to take a bright-line stance on Article 2
arguably opens the door for anti-abortion advocates to rely upon the ECtHRs consistent deference to States Parties to assert that if the tables were turned, and a State determined life
commenced at conception, the ECtHR would have to employ similar deference.
107 Evans v United Kingdom (2008) 46 EHRR 728.
108 Ibid. at paras 54^56.
109 Ibid. at para. 54.
110 Ibid.
111 Ibid. at paras 71^92.

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The applicant in Vo argued that her foetus was denied the right to life based
on medical negligence which led to her unanticipated therapeutic abortion.
After unsuccessfully pursuing a criminal prosecution against the negligent
doctor within the French court system,Vo filed a petition with the ECtHR alleging that France, in refusing to treat the foetus as a person and thus, prosecute
the doctor for unintentional homicide, violated her foetus Article 2 right to
life.104 The ECtHR ultimately declined to treat the foetus as a person or require
a homicide prosecution, by deferring the issue to France, in line with the
margin of appreciation doctrine.105 In the Courts view, the civil remedy available in French law was sufficient. The Vo decision is indicative of the ECtHRs
ambivalence regarding Article 2s application to foetal life and reluctance to
pose challenges to Member States abortion laws.106
More recently, the ECtHR was asked to consider, in Evans v United Kingdom,
whether embryos are entitled to Article 2 right to life protections under the
ECHR.107 The applicant in Evans complained of a violation of rights under
Articles 2, 8 and 14 of the EHRC based on her partners withdrawal of consent
for use of embryos they had created and frozen for future implantation.
Specifically, she claimed that the provisions of English law requiring the embryos
to be destroyed once her partner withdrew his consent to their continued storage
violated the embryos right to life, contrary to Article 2 of the Convention.
Affirming its decision in Vo v France, the ECtHR further declined to extend
Article 2 protection to the embryos.108 Referring to the lack of any European consensus on the scientific and legal definition of when human life begins, the
ECtHR again deferred to the state.109 In that regard, it recalled English law
under which an embryo does not have independent rights or interests and
cannot claim ^ or have claimed on its behalf ^ a right to life under Article 2 [of
the Convention].110 In addition, in the ECtHRs extensive analysis and balancing
of the rights (under Article 8right to private and family life) of the applicant to
preserve the embryos and the rights of her partner to have them destroyed, the
ECtHR did not include any embryonic interests in this balancing test, thus indicating, that the ECHR does not require protection of such arguable interests.111
While there have been few embryonic right to life claims, analogous to
claims of foetal rights, they may be asserted by abortion opponents to diminish

Abortion as a human right

267

Inter-American system
Contrary to the European human rights system, where protection of foetal
interests still remains unclear, the Inter-American system provides somewhat
more explicit guidance regarding right to life protections. For example, the
Inter-American Commission determined that Article 4 of the American
Convention113 did not preclude liberal abortion legislation in the Baby Boy
case.114 The Baby Boy case involved an American doctor who was prosecuted
for manslaughter after providing an abortion to a teenage girl at the girls and
her mothers request.115 A petition was submitted to the Inter-American
112 A case is pending before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights challenging the
Costa Rican Supreme Courts 2000 ruling banning in vitro fertilisation, based on the contention that human life begins at conception, thus entitling embryos and foetuses to the same
legal protections as born individuals. Opponents of the decision are alleging that the
Supreme Court ruling violates a myriad of human rights such as the right to health, to form
a family, to privacy and to benefit from scientific progress, as recognised under international
law. The Inter-American Commissions ruling could have worldwide implications, impacting
not only in vitro fertilisation and the right to bear children, but also the legal status of contraception and abortion. See Case 12.361, Ana Victoria Villalobos et al. v Costa Rica, Report No.
25/04 (2004).
113 Article 4 reads,The right to life shall be protected by law and, in general, from the moment of
conception.
114 Case 2141, Baby Boy, 25/OEA/ser.L./V./II.54, Doc. 9 rev. 1 (1981).
115 Ibid. Criminal charges were initially brought against the doctor in the Baby Boy case in the
Massachusetts court system; however, the highest court eventually overturned the doctors
conviction.

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womens right to abortion.112 Historically, issues of embryonic interests have


arisen within assisted reproductive technologies debates. Embryonic and
foetal rights start to overlap, however, in the in vitro fertilisation context.
Some abortion opponents maintain that dismissal of fertilised ova during
the in vitro process is equivalent to aborting a foetus, and thus, should be
prohibited as a potential right to life violation. Nevertheless, claims of embryonic rights are even more tenuous than those of foetal rights because
foetal rights claims have been denied thus far, and embryos are the biological
precursor to foetuses. Moreover, debates surrounding assisted reproductive
technologies in many instances do not raise the competing interests of pregnant women, an issue posed by foetal rights claims and in situations of
abortions.
While the ECtHRs decisions in Vo and Evans were ultimately favourable
towards Member States liberal abortion laws, it does, by deferring the decisions
to states on whether or not foetal life should be protected, potentially leave
the door open for such deference when foetal life and interests are protected
by national law. However, the ECtHR, in keeping in line with its case law,
should limit any such interests with the pregnant womans rights and interests,
should they be in conflict.

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HRLR 8 (2008), 249^294

C. Abortion to Preserve a Womans Health


Similar to the right to life, some international and regional human rights
instruments protect womens right to health. The WHO defines health as
a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being, and not merely the
absence of disease or infirmity.120 While this is not a guarantee of perfect
health, it imposes an obligation on governments to provide adequate healthcare and conditions conducive to enjoying good health. In the abortion context, the right to health can be interpreted as requiring governments to take
positive measures to avoid womens exposure to the health risks of unsafe abortion and to ensure pregnant womens access to abortion when their health is
at risk.121 Such measures arguably include removing legal restrictions on abortion and ensuring access to high-quality abortion services. Notably, convention
bodies consistently interpret treaty-based health protections as intricately connected within individuals right to life, especially in discussions of maternal
mortality.
As a whole, treaty-monitoring bodies have not precisely defined womens
health protections in this context. However, a recent interpretation of health in
116 O.A.S.Res.XXX, 9th International Conference of American States (1948), OEA/Ser.L/II.82
doc.6ev.1 at 17 (1992), Article 1. The petitioner sought recourse under the American
Declaration, as the United States is not a party to the American Convention. The American
Declaration is technically not a legally binding agreement under international law; however,
it is a source of legal obligations for OAS Member States and has legal ramifications for
those Member States that have not yet ratified the American Convention.
117 Ibid.
118 Baby Boy, supra n. 114 at para. 18.
119 Article 4, American Convention.
120 WHO, Constitution of the World Health Organization, signed 22 July 1946, OR Wld Hlth Org.,
2, 100, which entered into force on 7 April 1948, at the preamble.
121 Report of the International Conference on Population and Development, supra n. 12.

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Commission on behalf of the aborted foetus, referred to as Baby Boy, alleging


violations of the American Declaration of Rights and Duties of Man 1948
(American Declaration).116
Article 1 of the American Declaration protects the right to life without reference to the moment of conception,117 however, Article 4 of the American
Convention, which does make such reference, was used as an interpretative
tool in the case. The Inter-American Commission rejected the petitioners
claims and noted that an absolute protection of the right to life conflicted
with most states abortion and death penalty laws.118 The Commission also
found that, unlike the American Convention, the Declarations travaux pre paratoires revealed that a number of States were opposed to protecting life
from the moment of conception, and language to that effect had been
removed, thus qualifying any right to life protections under the American
Declaration.119

Abortion as a human right

269

the abortion context, by a treaty-monitoring body, aligns with the WHOs broad
conception of health, which includes mental health. Womens right to abortion
should be expanded to include abortion on request or for socio-economic reasons,
as denial of which may significantly affect womens mental or physical health.
(i) International human rights parameters ^ right to health

International covenant on civil and political rights


In the context of abortion, the HRC has linked womens right to life to conditions of health,124 and emphasised connections between unsafe abortions and
high rates of maternal mortality.125 The Committee has specifically addressed
the effect of restrictive abortion laws on womens health.126 For example, the
HRC recently reviewed Perus restrictive abortion law in KL v Peru.127 The
case of KL involved a 17-year-old Peruvian girl who was pregnant with an
anencephalic foetus. Doctors confirmed that her foetus would likely be born
without major portions of its brain leading to stillbirth or death, which posed
risks to KLs life if the pregnancy continued.128 A social worker advised KL to
get an abortion as continuing the pregnancy would . . . prolong the distress
and emotional instability of . . . [KL] and her family[,] and a psychiatrist concluded that . . . the so-called principle of the welfare of the unborn child has
caused serious harm to the mother, . . . [which] has substantially . . . [triggered]

122 Article 12, ICESCR; Article 12, CEDAW; and Article 24, ICRC.
123 KL v Peru (1153/2003), CCPR/C/85/D/1153/2003 (2005); 13 IHRR 355 (2006).
124 Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding: El Salvador, 22 August 2003, CCPR/CO/78/
SLV at para. 14; Mali, 16 April 2003, CCPR/CO/77/MLI at para. 14; and Poland, 2 December
2004, CCPR/CO/82/POL at para. 8.
125 Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding: Gambia, 12 August 2004, CCPR/CO/75/GMB
at para. 17; Guatemala, 27 August 2001, CCPR/CO/72/GTM at para. 19; Mali, 16 April 2003,
CCPR/CO/77/MLI at para. 14; Mongolia, 25 May 2000, CCPR/C/79/Add.120 at para. 8(b); and
Poland, 29 July 1999, CCPR/C/79/Add.110 at para. 11.
126 Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding Mali, 16 April 2003, CCPR/CO/77/MLI at
para. 13.
127 KL v Peru, supra n. 123.
128 Ibid. at para. 2.2.

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The ICESCR, ICEDAW and ICRC expressly confirm womens right to health and
treaty-monitoring bodies have interpreted and applied that right in the context
of abortion.122 The ICCPRs provisions do not expressly protect the right to
health, however, the HRC has recently handed down the decision in KL v Peru
that has addressed the intersections of health, privacy rights and the right
to be free from inhumane and degrading treatment, and called for a broad
reading of health exceptions under a states abortion law.123

270

HRLR 8 (2008), 249^294

129 Ibid. at paras 2.4 and 2.5.


130 The organisations were: Peruvian organisation Estudio para la Defensa de los Derechos de la
Mujer (DEMUS); the Latin American and Caribbean Committee on the Defense of Womens
Rights (CLADEM); and the United States organisation the Center for Reproductive Rights.
131 KL v Peru, supra n. 123 at paras 6.3 and 6.6.
132 Ibid. at para. 6.3.
133 Ibid. at para. 6.4.

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the symptoms of depression, severely impacting KLs development and future


mental health.129 While abortion is illegal in Peru, there is a limited exception
for womens life or health. Despite this legal exception and medical recommendations to terminate the girls pregnancy, Perus state hospitals ultimately
denied KLs request for an abortion because they claimed it fell outside the
health and life exceptions, as there is no explicit right to abortion in cases of
severe foetal impairment.
KL was forced to carry her pregnancy to term and gave birth to an anencephalic girl. After she was forced to breastfeed the baby for four days, the baby,
as medically expected, died and KL became severely depressed, requiring
psychiatric treatment. Thereafter, three non-governmental organisations
collectively submitted an individual complaint to the HRC on KLs behalf.130
The individual complaint alleged that state authorities denial of KLs legal
right to therapeutic abortion violated Article 2 (respect for and guarantee
of rights), Article 3 (equality and non-discrimination), Article 6 (right to life),
Article 7 (freedom from torture and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment),
Article 17 (right to privacy), Article 24 (special measures for minors) and
Article 26 (equal protection of the law) of the ICCPR.
The HRC ultimately held Peru in breach of its ICCPR obligations under
Articles 2, 7, 17 and 24, for denying access to a therapeutic abortion permitted
by its own domestic law, but deemed KLs Article 3 claim to be unsubstantiated
and found it unnecessary to make an Article 6 finding based on the finding
of an Article 7 violation.131 With respect to Article 7, the HRC reasoned that
KLs depression and emotional distress were foreseeable and the States omission in not enabling . . . [KL] to benefit from a therapeutic abortion was . . . the
cause of the suffering she experienced.132 It followed that a states obligation
to respect the right protected under Article 7 requires it to guarantee womens
access to abortion in cases where pregnancy threatens her physical and
mental health, including due to severe foetal impairment. Notably, the HRCs
finding of an Article 7 violation did not depend on the lawfulness of
the procedure, which thus opened the possibility for both the legal and practically inaccessibility of a therapeutic abortion.
With respect to Article 17, the HRC relied on the WHOs holistic definition of
health to read mental health into Perus health exception, and found that
since KL was legally entitled to an abortion, the refusal to act in accordance
with the authors decision to terminate her pregnancy was not justified.133
Infringing on KLs rights in this regard, in turn, violated her right to privacy.

Abortion as a human right

271

Convention on the elimination of all forms of discrimination against women


Article 12 of ICEDAW sets forth womens right to health.139 CEDAW has
addressed in its Concluding Observations the intersections between abortion
and womens right to health and other rights related to marriage and family
life. For example, it has raised general concerns over high rates of abortion,140
134 Ibid. at para. 6.5.
135 Ibid. at para. 9.
136 Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding Ireland, 29 March 2000, CCPR/C/21/Rev.1/
Add.10 at para. 24.
137 Ibid. at para. 23.
138 Ibid. at para. 24.
139 Article 12(1), ICEDAW.
140 Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding: Chile, 9 July 1999, A/54/38 at para. 209; Czech
Republic, 14 May 1998, A/53/38 at para. 197; Georgia, 1 July 1999, A/54/38 at para. 111;
Greece, 1 February 1999, A/54/38 at para. 207; Hungary, 9 May 1996, A/51/38 at para. 254;
Namibia, 12 August 1997, A/52/38/Rev.1, Part II at para. 111; Lithuania, 16 June 2000, A/55/
38 at para. 158; Republic of Korea, 8 July 1998, A/55/38/Rev.1 at para. 382(c); Romania, 23

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As to Article 24 (special measures for minors), the HRC noted KLs special vulnerability as a minor girl, by recognising the unique barriers and susceptibility to rights violations that adolescents face when attempting to access
abortion.134 Finally, as to Article 2 (respect for and guarantee of human
rights), the HRC held that the state had a duty to provide legal and administrative mechanism to prevent or redress rights violations.135
The significance of KL is immense because it marks the first time a UN
human rights body held a government accountable for failing to ensure
access to abortion services to an individual. In sum, under KL, the HRC
requires a broad reading of statutory health exceptions to include issues of
mental health, the positive realisation of a right to access abortion for states
that permit abortions in circumstances of foetal impairment, necessary measures to guarantee adolescents access to reproductive health services, and
accessible, economically feasible procedures to appeal a doctors refusal to perform a legal abortion.
On a related note, the HRC has called upon Ireland, in its 2000 Concluding
Observations, (which was prior to the decision in KL) to ensure that women
are not compelled to continue with pregnancies where that is incompatible
with obligations arising under the ICCPR (Article 7) and General Comment
No. 28[,] on equality of rights between men and women.136 The Committee
expressed concern that women in Ireland could only obtain abortions
when the pregnant womans life was endangered, and did not include an
exception for pregnancies that resulted from rape.137 The Committee recommended that Ireland bring its abortion legislation in line with the Covenant
and its interpretations.138

272

HRLR 8 (2008), 249^294

141
142
143

144

145

146
147

June 2000, A/55/38 at para. 314; Russian Federation, 31 May 1995, A/50/38 at para. 523;
Slovakia, 30 June 1998, A/53/38/Rev.1 at para. 91; Ukraine, 9 May 1996, A/51/38 at para. 287;
and Vietnam, 31 July 2001, A/56/38 at para. 266.
Greece and Vietnam, supra n. 140.
Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding: Cuba, 19 June 2000, A/55/38 at para. 257; and
Finland, 31 May 1995, A/50/38 at para. 378.
Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding: Georgia, 1 July 1999, A/54/38 at para. 111;
Greece, 1 February 1999, A/54/38 at para. 207; Hungary, 9 May 1996, A/51/38 at para. 254;
Lithuania, 16 June 2000, A/55/38 at para. 158; Mexico, 25 August 2006, CEDAW/C/MEX/CO/
6 at para. 32; Mongolia, 2 February 2001, A/56/38 at para. 273; and Ukraine, 9 May 1996, A/
51/38 at para. 287.
Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding: Azerbaijan, 14 May 1998, A/53/38 at para. 66;
Burundi, 2 February 2001, A/56/38 at para. 62; Cuba, 25 August 2006, CEDAW/C/CUB/CO/6
at para. 27; Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, 3 February 2006, CEDAW/C/MKD/CO/3
at para. 31; Georgia, 1 July 1999, A/54/38 at para. 111; Kazakhstan, 2 February 2001, A/56/38
at para. 105; Kyrgyzstan, 27 January 1999, A/54/38 at para. 136; Republic of Moldova, 27
June 2000, A/55/38 at para. 109; Romania, 23 June 2000, A/55/38 at para. 314; Slovakia, 30
June 1998, A/53/38/Rev.1 at para. 91; and Uzbekistan, 2 February 2001, A/56/38 at para. 185.
Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding: Azerbaijan, 14 May 1998, A/53/38 at para. 73;
Burundi, 2 February 2001, A/56/38 at para. 62; Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, 3
February 2006, CEDAW/C/MKD/CO/3 at para. 31; Georgia, 1 July 1999, A/54/38 at para. 112;
Greece, 1 February 1999, A/54/38 at para. 208; Kazakhstan, 2 February 2001, A/56/38 at
para. 106; Kyrgyzstan, 27 January 1999, A/54/38 at para. 137; Republic of Moldova, 27 June
2000, A/55/38 at para. 110; Romania, 23 June 2000, A/55/38 at para. 315; Slovakia, 30 June
1998, A/53/38/Rev.1 at para. 92; Uzbekistan, 2 February 2001, A/56/38 at para. 186; and
Vietnam, 31 July 2001, A/56/38 at para. 267.
Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding Kyrgyzstan, 27 January 1999, A/54/38 at para.
137.
Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding; Czech Republic, 14 May 1998, A/53/38 at para.
197; and Mauritius, 31 May 1995, A/50/38 at para. 196.

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particularly among adolescents,141 and has praised efforts by States Parties to


reduce abortion rates.142 CEDAW has expressed particular concern regarding
lack of access to contraceptive methods and family planning services, which
lead to unsafe abortions and rising rates of maternal mortality.143
CEDAW has also expressed concern about the reliance on abortion
as a primary means of family planning.144 In that regard, CEDAW has
recommended that contraception and family planning services be freely
available and accessible145 and that States Parties ensure that abortion is
not perceived as a family planning method.146 CEDAW has also expressed
a particular concern in cases where contraceptive methods are freely
available but the rate of abortion remains very high.147 Notably, CEDAW
has never expressly acknowledged that access to safe, legal abortion is
always needed as a back up method of family planning when methods of contraception fail.
CEDAW has recently shown a greater willingness to raise issues related to
abortion and direct States Parties to take affirmative measures to safeguard
womens reproductive rights. For example, based on concern over Irelands
extremely restrictive abortion laws, the Committee has urged Ireland on two
occasions to facilitate a national dialogue on womens right to reproductive

Abortion as a human right

273

Convention on the rights of the child


Article 24 of the ICRC guarantees childrens right to the highest attainable standard of health and places responsibility on State Parties to ensure proper
health care for mothers, children and families. The CRC expanded upon Article
24s protections in General Comment No. 4 (adolescent health and development),
which emphasises the significant health risks faced by adolescents due to
unwanted pregnancies and unsafe abortions.153 The CRC has called upon
States Parties to take measures to reduce maternal morbidity and mortality in
148 Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding: Ireland, 22 July 2005, CEDAW/A/60/38 paras
359^405, 397. See also Ireland, 25 June 1999, CEDAW/A/54/38 at paras 161^201.
149 Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding; Andorra, 31 July 2001, A/56/38 at para. 48;
Argentina, 23 July 1997, A/52/38 Rev.1, Part II at para. 319; Belize, 1 July 1999, A/54/38 at
para. 57; Burkina Faso, 31 January 2000, A/55/38 at para. 276; Cameroon, 26 June 2000, A/
55/38 at para. 60; Chile, 9 July 1999, A/54/38 at para. 229; Chile, 31 May 1995, A/50/38 at
para. 158; Chile, 25 August 2006, CEDAW/C/CHI/CO/4 at paras 19^20; Colombia, 4 February
1999, A/54/38 at para. 394; Dominican Republic, 14 May 1998, A/53/38 at para. 349; Ireland,
1 July 1999, A/54/38 at para. 186; Jordan, 27 January 2000, A/55/38 at para. 181; Mauritius,
31 May 1995, A/50/38 at para. 196; Mexico, 14 May 1998, A/53/38 at para. 408; Namibia, 12
August 1997, A/52/38/Rev.1, Part II at para. 127; Nepal, 1 July 1999, A/54/38 at paras 139 and
148; Panama, 2 July 1998, A/55/38/Rev.1 at para. 201; Paraguay, 9 May 1996, A/51/38 at para.
131; Peru, 8 July 1998, A/53/38/Rev.1 at para. 340; Peru, 31 May 1995, A/50/38 at paras 446
and 447; Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, 12 August 1997, A/52/38/Rev.1 at para. 148;
United Kingdom, 1 July 1999, A/55/38 at para. 310; and Zimbabwe, 14 May 1998, A/53/38 at
para. 159.
150 Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding Mexico, 25 August 2006, CEDAW/C/MEX/CO/6
at para. 32.
151 Ibid. at para. 33.
152 Ibid.
153 CRC ^ General Comment No. 4, supra n. 70.

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health, including the [countrys] very restrictive abortion laws and improve
family planning services and availability of contraception.148
CEDAW has also called upon States Parties to review legislation
criminalising abortion and potentially remove barriers restricting access
to safe abortion, connecting such barriers to womens right to health.149
For example, CEDAWs 2006 Concluding Observations to Mexico expressed
concern that abortion remained one of the leading causes of maternal mortality, despite legalisation of abortion in some contexts, due to lack of access to
safe abortion services and a wide range of contraception, including emergency
contraception.150 CEDAW recommended that Mexico increase access to reproductive health care and family planning services and address obstacles to
accessing those services, provide sex education targeting men and women,
and adolescent boys and girls, and harmonise federal and state abortion legislation.151 CEDAW also urged Mexico to implement a comprehensive strategy to
provide effective access to safe abortion in situations provided for under the
law, a wide range of contraceptives, including emergency contraception, and
campaigns to raise the awareness regarding unsafe abortions.152

274

HRLR 8 (2008), 249^294

International covenant on economic, social and cultural rights


Article 12(1) of the ICESCR confirms the right to the enjoyment of the
highest attainable standard of physical and mental health and Article 12(2)(a)
specifically requires States Parties to reduce the stillborn birth-rate and infant
mortality.
The CESCR has repeatedly expressed deep concern in its Concluding
Observations over the relationship between high rates of maternal mortality
and illegal, unsafe, clandestine abortions.160 The CESCR has thus recommended that States Parties increase education on reproductive and sexual
health,161 as well as implement programmes to increase access to family

154 Ibid.
155 Ibid.
156 Concluding Observations of the CRC regarding: Guatemala, 9 July 2001, CRC/C/15/Add.154 at
para. 40; Chad, 24 August 1999, CRC/C/15/Add.107 at para. 30; and Nicaragua, 24 August
1999, CRC/C/15/Add.108 at para. 35.
157 Concluding Observations of the CRC regarding China, 24 November 2005, CRC/C/CHN/CO/2
at paras 64^5.
158 Ibid. at para. 64.
159 Ibid. at para. 65.
160 Concluding Observations of the CESCR regarding: Mexico, 9 June 2006, E/C.12/MEX/CO/4 at
para. 25; Nepal, 24 September 2001, E/C.12/1/Add.66 at para. 32; Panama, 24 September
2001, E/C.12/1/Add.64 at para. 20; Poland, 16 June 1998, E/C.12/1/Add.26 at para. 12; Senegal,
24 September 2001, E/C.12/1/Add.62 at para. 26; and Spain, 7 June 2003, E/C.12/1/Add.99 at
para. 22.
161 Concluding Observations of the CESCR regarding: Bolivia, 21 May 2001, E/C.12/1/Add.60 at
para. 43; Mexico, 8 December 1999, E/C.12/1/Add.41 at para. 43; and Nepal, 24 September
2001, E/C.12/1/Add.66 at paras 33 and 55.

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adolescent girls, particularly caused by early pregnancy and unsafe abortion


practices, and to support adolescent parents.154 Notably, the CRC has urged
States Parties to provide safe abortion services where abortion is not against
the law.155 Further, the CRC has recognised that safe abortion is part of adolescent girls right to adequate health under Article 24, noting that high maternal
mortality rates, due largely to high incidence of illegal abortion contribute significantly to inadequate local health standards for children.156
The CRC recently addressed adolescent health in the context of abortion in
its 2005 Concluding Observation to China.157 The CRC expressed concern
regarding the high incidence of teenage pregnancies and abortions in the
Hong Kong Special Administrative Regions.158 The Committee recommended
that China pay close attention to adolescent health and . . . health services,
taking into account . . . General Comment No. 4 and strengthen its efforts to
promote adolescent health, including by providing sexual and reproductive
health education in schools, and to introduce school health services, including
youth-sensitive and confidential counselling and care.159

Abortion as a human right

275

planning services and contraception.162 The CESCR has also expressed general
concern over the prevalence of abortion,163 especially among adolescent
girls,164 as a result of lack of access to contraception.165 Furthermore, the
CESCR has praised family planning policies that result in declines in abortion
rates,166 and it has recommended increased family planning programmes to
decrease the prevalence of abortion.167 Finally, the CESCR has commented on
States Parties failure to provide information on abortion168 and has recommended study and analysis of high abortion rates.169

Similar to the international human rights system, there have been significant
developments within regional human rights systems regarding womens
access to abortion as they intersect with womens right to health. One of the
foremost affirmations of such rights was in the ECtHRs landmark decision
Tysia c v Poland, where the ECtHR was asked whether the States failure
to apply the exception to Polands abortion law, which permits abortion for
health reasons, violated the ECHR.170

European system
The ECHR does not expressly guarantee any health or reproductive rights,171 or
any determined standard of medical care.172 Furthermore, the ECHR bodies
162 Concluding Observations of the CESCR regarding: Kuwait, 7 June 2004, E/C.12/1/Add.98 at
para. 43, Mexico, 9 June 2006, E/C.12/MEX/CO/4 at para. 44; and Poland, 16 June 1998, E/
C.12/1/Add.26 at para. 12.
163 Concluding Observations of the CESCR regarding: Mexico, 9 June 2006, E/C.12/MEX/CO/4 at
para. 25; Senegal, 31 August 2001, E/C.12/1/Add.62 at para. 26; and Spain, 7 June 2004, E/
C.12/1/Add.99 at para. 22.
164 Concluding Observations of the CESCR regarding: Mexico, 9 June 2006, E/C.12/MEX/CO/4 at
para. 25; and Spain, 7 June 2004, E/C.12/1/Add.99 at para. 22.
165 Concluding Observations of the CESCR regarding: Armenia, 8 December 1999, E/C.12/1/Add.3
at para. 15; and Poland, 16 June 1998, E/C.12/1/Add.26 at para. 12.
166 Concluding Observations of the CESCR regarding: Russian Federation, 20 May 1997, E/C.12/1/
A dd.13 at para. 10.
167 Concluding Observations of the CESCR regarding: Armenia, 8 December 1999, E/C.12/1/
Add.39 at para. 19; Nepal, 24 September 2001, E/C.12/1/Add.66 at para. 55; Panama, 24
September 2001, E/C.12/1/Add.64 at para. 37; Senegal, 24 September 2001, E/C.12/1/Add.62 at
para. 47; Spain, 7 June 2004, E/C.12/1/Add.99 at para. 40; and Ukraine, 24 September 2001,
E/C.12/1/A dd.65 at para. 31.
168 Concluding Observations of the CESCR regarding Switzerland, 7 December 1998, E/C.12/1/
Add.30 at para. 22.
169 Concluding Observations of the CESCR regarding; Mauritius, 28 December 1995, E/C.12/1995/
18 at para. 245; Poland, 19 December 2002, E/C.12/1/Add.82 at para. 51; and Spain, 7 June
2004, E/C.12/1/Add.99 at para. 40.
170 Tysia c v Poland (2007) 45 EHRR 42.
171 How to Use the European Convention, supra n. 80 at Part I (b)^(f).
172 Ibid. at Part III.1.

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(ii) Regional human rights parameters ^ the womans right to health

276

HRLR 8 (2008), 249^294

173
174
175
176
177

178

179
180
181

Ibid. at Part III.7.


Ibid.
Article 2, ECHR.
Tavares v France, supra n. 79.
How to Use the European Convention, supra n. 80, (see also Ireland v United Kingdom A 25
(1978); (1979^1980) 2 EHRR 25 at para. 162, where the ECtHR stated . . . ill-treatment must
attain a minimum level of severity if it is to fall within the scope of Article 3 . . .. The assessment of this minimum is, in the nature of things, relative; it depends on all the circumstances
of the case, such as the duration of the treatment, its physical or mental effects and, in some
cases, the sex, age and state of health of the victim, etc.
Ibid. at Part III.3, stating: Treatment is degrading if the person concerned has undergone
humiliation or debasement attaining a minimum level of severity. The assessment must be
done on a case-by-case basis. Note, however, the author asserts that no such Article 3 complaints have been successful in the context of reproductive rights.
Ibid. at Part III.1. See also M.C. v Bulgaria (2005) 40 EHRR 20.
Bruggemann and Scheuten v Federal Republic Germany (1977) 10 DR 100 at para. 100. See also
Tysia c v Poland, supra n. 170 at paras 105^115.
How to Use the European Convention, supra n. 80 at Part III.7.

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have carefully avoided stating whether abortion is protected under the ECHR,
and/or whether legal and safe abortion should or should not be available
under domestic law, . . . and if so, on what conditions.173 As it now stands, it
appears that Member States are free to determine the availability and legal
status of abortion.174 However, jurisprudence under the ECHR does indicate
that the ECtHR may show less deference to Member States in cases where
women cannot obtain abortions when their lives and/or health are at risk.
Health-related rights have been read into Articles 2 (right to life), 3 (freedom
from inhuman and degrading treatment) and 8 (right to respect for private
and family life) by ECHR bodies. With respect to Article 2, again, Member
States have an obligation to ensure procedures are in place to protect lives
when threatened.175 The EComHR has interpreted this to include hospital regulations for the protection of patients lives and an effective system to determine the cause of death which occurs in a hospital and which may pose civil
and/or criminal liability.176 With respect to Article 3, [f]ailure to afford adequate medical care may be also in breach of the prohibition of torture, inhuman or degrading treatment . . ..177 While a few complaints have been made
under Article 3 in the reproductive health care context, to date none has been
successful.178 Article 8 protects individuals from arbitrary interference
by public authorities. Article 8 also imposes a positive obligation on governments to adopt measures designed to secure respect for private life, even in
the sphere of relations between individuals.179 With respect to abortion, the
ECHR jurisprudence recognises that legislation regulating abortion falls
under the sphere of Article 8 and statutory abortion restrictions may constitute an interference with womens private lives.180
There is no recent case-law to the effect that non-availability of legal
and safe abortion can amount to a breach of Article 2, or Article 8 of the
ECHR.181 This is due to the fact that none of the cases filed challenging
the unavailability of abortion have moved beyond the admissibility stage. The

Abortion as a human right

277

182
183
184
185
186

Bruggemann and Scheuten v Germany, supra n. 180.


Ibid. at 18 at para. 59.
Ibid. at 19 at para. 61.
Ibid. at 19 at para. 62
Paton v United Kingdom, supra n. 96; R.H. v Norway Application No. 17004/90, Admissibility
decision of 19 May 1992, at para. 4; and Boso v Italy, supra n. 99.
187 Tysia c v Poland, supra n. 171 at para. 80.
188 Ibid. at paras 8^9.
189 Ibid. at para. 9.

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only decision on the merits which addressed a challenge to a Member States


restrictive abortion law is the 1977 case of Bruggemann and Scheuten v Federal
Republic of Germany.182 The applicants in Bruggemann asserted that a German
statute criminalising abortion after the 12th week of pregnancy violated their
privacy interests under Article 8. The EComHR affirmed the privacy interests
at stake by stating that, [w]henever a woman is pregnant her private life
becomes closely connected with the developing foetus[,]183 but held that not
every restriction on termination of unwanted pregnancies constitutes an interference with a womans privacy rights under Article 8(1).184 In rendering this
decision, the EComHR relied upon the German statutes exception for womens
health or life, implying that an absolute abortion ban that does not make
exceptions for the health or life of pregnant woman may very well be an impermissible interference of privacy rights under Article 8.185
Since Bruggemann, the ECtHR has recognised, in some circumstances, pregnant womens right to terminate their pregnancies under Article 8, but only
in cases where abortion was legally permissible under the Member States law.
For example, Paton v United Kingdom, R.H. v Norway and Boso v Italy, involved
claims by fathers that Article 8 granted them rights regarding the foetus
when the women sought to terminate their pregnancies. In each of these
cases the claim was denied and it was confirmed that womens pregnancyrelated privacy rights trumped the fathers purported ECHR rights because a
pregnant woman is, the person primarily concerned by the pregnancy and its
continuation or termination.186
In March 2007, the ECtHR decided for the first time in Tysia c v Poland, that
Article 8 procedural obligations require Poland to provide a comprehensive
legal framework regulating disputes between pregnant women and doctors as
to the need to terminate pregnancy in cases of a threat to a womans
health.187 The applicant, Alicja Tysia c, was a Polish woman who nearly went
blind when forced to continue a pregnancy that threatened her health.
Suffering from a severe eye condition, Tysiac sought to terminate her pregnancy after three doctors confirmed the pregnancy and pending delivery
threatened her eyesight.188 While Polish law permits abortion for health
reasons, the doctors refused to give Tysia c the requisite health certificate to terminate her pregnancy.189 Tysiac sought further medical advice and received
a certificate confirming the dangers pregnancy posed to her health, but she

278

HRLR 8 (2008), 249^294

190
191
192
193
194
195

Ibid. at paras 10^13.


Ibid. at paras 16^17.
Ibid. at para. 3.
Ibid. at para. 66.
Ibid. at para. 76.
Ibid. at para. 118. The ECtHR prescribed some of the key components of such a procedure: it
should guarantee to a pregnant woman the right to be heard in person and have her views
considered; the body reviewing her appeal should issue written grounds for its decision;
and, recognising the time factor is of critical importance in decisions involving abortion,
the procedure should ensure that such decisions are timely.
196 Ibid. at para. 135.

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was denied permission to abort the foetus.190 As predicted, Tysiacs eyesight


greatly deteriorated after delivery.191
Tysia c initially filed a criminal complaint against state authorities, but was
unsuccessful. She then filed a petition with the ECtHR alleging that the government violated Articles 3, 8, 13 and 14 of the ECHR by denying her abortion
and thus failing to apply Polands abortion law.192 With respect to Article 3
(freedom from inhuman and degrading treatment), the ECtHR found, with
little explanation, that the facts alleged did not amount to an Article 3 violation. Rather, the ECtHR deemed Tysiacs complaints more appropriately examined under Article 8.193 With respect to Article 8 (private life), Tysiac argued
that her rights had been violated both substantively, by failing to provide her
with a legal abortion, and . . . [procedurally,] . . . by the absence of a comprehensive legal framework to guarantee her rights by appropriate procedural
means.194 Notably, the ECtHR did not address the alleged substantive violation
of Article 8, although it recognised that she suffered severe distress and
anguish when contemplating the possible negative consequences of her pregnancy and upcoming delivery for her health. The ECtHR did decide that
Poland violated its positive obligation to establish an effective procedure
through which Tysiac could have appealed her doctors refusal to grant her
abortion request and capable of determining whether the conditions for
obtaining a lawful abortion had been met in her case. In other words, where
Polish law accords women the right to legal abortion, the government must
establish procedures enabling women to exercise that right. The ECtHR noted
some of the key components of such a procedure, which include: (i) a guarantee that a pregnant woman has the right to be heard in person and have her
views considered; (ii) a body to hear the womans appeal; (iii) that the body
reviewing her appeal should issue written grounds for its decision; and, finally,
(iv) that the government recognise that the time factor is of critical importance in decisions involving abortion and therefore the hearing and appeals
process should ensure that such decisions are timely. 195
As to Tysiacs Article 13 (right to an effective remedy) claim, the ECtHR
found that Polands positive obligations under Article 13 overlapped with
those under Article 8, and thus there were no outstanding issues to merit
a separate Article 13 violation.196 Finally, the ECtHR declined to examine

Abortion as a human right

279

Inter-American system
On 10 December 2006, the Rapporteur on the Rights of Women of the
Inter-American Commission issued an unprecedented letter of concern to
Nicaraguas Minister of Foreign Affairs, declaring Nicaraguas recently passed
abortion ban contrary to international law, as it threatened womens human
rights and jeopardised womens health. The Rapporteur reiterated that therapeutic abortion has been internationally recognized as a specialized and necessary health service for women, its ultimate purpose being to save the life of the
mother when threatened during pregnancyand that denial of abortion services
endangers womens lives as well as their physical and psychological integrity.198
The Rapporteur also referenced prominent human rights bodies and representatives position that total abortion bans negatively impact women, to confirm
that [s]uch bans result in high rates of maternal mortality and therefore pose a
197 Ibid. at paras 55^61 and 144.
198 Organization of American States ^ Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, Letter to
Nicaragua Minister of Foreign Affairs, HE Norman Calderas Cardenal, 10 November 2006,
available at: http://www.reproductiverights.org/pdf/index_nicaragua_ english.pdf [last
accessed 22 September 2007].

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Tysia cs Article 14 (prohibition of discrimination) claim based on its previous


finding of an Article 8 violation.197
Tysia c is significant because it confirms that womens right to access legal
abortion may not be illusory. The ECtHRs Article 8 analysis holds states to
their procedural obligation to make abortion practically available where it is
legally available. However, the Tysia c decision may indicate the ECtHRs unwillingness to address substantive violations of abortion rights, even when there
is a legal basis for abortion, and propensity to rely on procedural violations to
remedy the wrong. It may also indicate the ECtHRs unwillingness to decide
substantive violations when there are arguably undecided medical issues
in a case, even when state action has caused the applicant severe distress.
As to the discrimination claim, the decision exemplifies the ECtHRs overarching unwillingness to address human rights issues generally and womens
human rights issues specifically as a form of discrimination against women.
As the ECtHR has never decided a case challenging a State Partys restrictive
abortion law on the merits, other than in Bruggemann, to hold that abortion
should be available, it is unclear how the ECtHR would decide a petition
directly contesting the merits of an abortion law. The case law does somewhat
indicate, however, that regardless of the substantive claims sought, the ECtHR
has looked at abortion-related claims from a perspective of health of the pregnant woman. In that regard, it may behoove advocates to frame the right to
access abortion claims in the context of womens health, when submitting
such claims to the ECtHR.

280

HRLR 8 (2008), 249^294

public health problem.199 The Rapporteur then called upon the Nicaraguan government to take into account the above referenced human rights principles
when deciding whether to ratify the countrys abortion ban.200
The Rapporteurs 2006 statement to Nicaragua represents the first time a
human rights body representative has contacted a Member State on its own
accord to emphasise the human rights implications of a pending state action.
At present, the ratification of Nicaraguas ban is still pending on a decision by
the countrys Supreme Court.

The African Womens Protocol explicitly calls upon States Parties to [authorise]
medical abortion . . . [when] the continued pregnancy endangers the mental
and physical health of the mother.201 It is unclear whether the Protocols
health-related provision will be interpreted as separate mental or physical
health grounds or conjunctively, requiring endangerment to both physical
and mental health. Either way, the Protocol squarely frames abortion as an
issue of womens health.
Similar to the Protocols preservation of life grounds for abortion, the health
grounds includes mental and physical health, and merely requires a womens
health to be endanger[ed].202 As health is not merely the absence of disease,
but rather includes a more holistic sense of social well-being, as defined by
the WHO, the Protocols health grounds should be interpreted broadly.
D. Abortion for Women who have Suffered Rape or Incest
Other than the African Womens Protocol, no international or regional human
rights treaty explicitly confers the right to abortion on women who have suffered rape and/or incest. Nonetheless, treaty-monitoring bodies are addressing
the issue with greater frequency in Concluding Observations to States Parties,
thus bolstering the law in this context.
(i) International human rights parameters
International covenant on civil and political rights
The HRC has expressed concern regarding the criminalisation of abortion
when the pregnancy is the result of rape,203 and confirmed that such
199
200
201
202
203

Ibid.
Ibid.
Article 14.2 (c), African Womens Protocol.
Ibid.
Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding Gambia, 12 August 2004, CCPR/CO/75/GMB
at para. 17.

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African system

Abortion as a human right

281

Convention on the elimination of all forms of discrimination against women


CEDAW has raised general concerns regarding the accessibility of safe abortion,212 particularly in cases of rape.213 It has also expressed concern regarding
laws criminalising abortion when the pregnancy resulted from rape or

204 Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding Peru, 15 November 2000, CCPR/CO/70/PER at
para. 20.
205 Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding Poland, 2 December 2004, CCPR/CO/82/POL
at para. 8.
206 Ibid.
207 Peru, supra n. 204.
208 Article 7, ICCPR.
209 HRC ^ General Comment No. 28, supra n. 34 at para. 11.
210 Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding Ireland, 24 July 2000, A/55/40 at para. 23.
211 Ibid. at para. 24.
212 Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding; Ireland, 1 July 1999, A/54/38 at para. 185;
Mexico, 14 May 1998, A/53/38 at para. 399; Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, 12 August
1997, A/52/38/Rev.1 at para. 148; and Tunisia, 31 May 1995, A/50/38 at para. 246.
213 Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding; Jordan, 27 January 2000, A/55/38 at para. 180;
Myanmar, 28 January 2000, A/55/38 at paras 129^130; Panama, 2 July 1998, A/55/38/Rev.1
at para. 201; and Venezuela, 12 August 1997, A/52/38/Rev.1 at para. 236.

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legislation violates womens right to life under Article 6.204 For example, the
HRC in its 2004 Concluding Observations to Poland, expressed concern regarding the unavailability of abortion in practice even when the law permits it,
such as in cases where pregnancy resulted from rape.205 To address this, the
HRC recommended that Poland liberalise its legislation and practice on abortion.206 The HRC similarly recommended that Peru amend its restrictive criminal abortion law, because laws that subject women to criminal penalties for
terminating a pregnancy that results from rape are incompatible with the
rights under the ICCPR to equal enjoyment of rights (Article 3), life (Article 6)
and to be free from torture and from cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment
or punishment (Article 7).207
The HRC further addressed abortion in the context of rape, as a potential
violation of the prohibition on torture, cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment
or punishment,208 in General Comment No. 28 on equality of rights between
men and women. Under the General Comment States Parties are required to
report on whether they provide safe access to abortion for women who
become pregnant as a result of rape, to enable the HRC to assess their compliance with Article 7.209 The HRC also expressed concern regarding Irelands
abortion law, which restricts abortion to situations where a pregnant womans
life is in danger and does not permit the procedure for women becoming pregnant from rape.210 The HRC called upon Ireland to ensure that women are not
compelled to continue with pregnancies where that is incompatible with obligations arising underArticle 7 and General Comment No. 28.211

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HRLR 8 (2008), 249^294

incest.214 In those situations, CEDAW has called for amendment of such legislation,215 and credited States Parties for decriminalising abortion in cases of serious malformation of the foetus or in circumstances of rape.216
International covenant on economic, social and cultural rights

(ii) Regional human rights parameters


European system
The ECtHR has not yet decided a case regarding womens right to abortion for
pregnancies resulting from rape or incest. However, since Member States have
the positive obligation to prevent ill-treatment, including rape, and to provide
effective remedies in such cases where it occurs,222 it is arguable that such
remedies should include the right to access abortion in cases where pregnancy
214 Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding Nepal, 25/06/1999, CEDAW/A/54/38 at para.
147.
215 Ibid. at para. 148.
216 Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding Colombia, 2 February 2007, CEDAW/C/COL/
CO/6 at para. 22.
217 Concluding Observations of the CESCR regarding Mexico, 9 June 2006, E/C.12/MEX/CO/4 at
para. 25.
218 Ibid.
219 Ibid.
220 Concluding Observations of the CESCR regarding: Bolivia, 21 May 2001, E/C.12/1/Add.60 at
para. 43; Nepal, 24 September 2001, E/C.12/1/Add.66 at paras 32 and 55; Poland, 16 June
1998, E/C.12/1/Add.26 at para. 12; Poland, 19 December 2002, E/C.12/1/Add.82 at para. 29;
and Senegal, 24 September 2001, E/C.12/1/Add.62 at paras 26 and 47.
221 Concluding Observations of the CESCR regarding: Chile, 1 December 2004, E/C.12/1/Add.105
at para. 53; Kuwait, 7 June 2004, E/C.12/1/Add.98 at para. 43; Malta, 14 December 2004, E/
C.12/1/Add.101 at para. 41; Monaco, 13 June 2006, E/C.12/MCO/CO/1 at para. 23; and Nepal,
24 September 2001, E/C.12/1/Add.66 at paras 33 and 55.
222 M.C. v Bulgaria, supra n. 180.

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The CESCR expressed concern in its 2006 Concluding Observation to


Mexico regarding obstruction of access to legal abortion after rape such as
misinformation, lack of clear guidelines, abusive behaviour directed at rape
victims by public prosecutors and health personnel,217 and regarding
legal impediments to abortion in cases of incest.218 As a solution, the CESCR
recommended that Mexico ensure and monitor full access of rape victims
to legal abortion, implementation of a reproductive health services and
education programme to ensure full access to everyone, especially in rural
and indigenous communities.219 The CESCR has also linked restrictive
abortion laws or the criminalisation of abortion, to the problem of unsafe
abortion and high rates of maternal mortality,220 and called for States Parties
to legalise abortion when a pregnancy is life threatening or the result of rape
or incest.221

Abortion as a human right

283

is the result of rape. Nonetheless, due to the lack of case law under the ECHR in
this regard, it is unclear how the ECtHR would decide such a claim, especially
in countries where there is no explicit rape exception in the abortion law.

Inter-American system

223 Case 161-02, Paulina del Carmen Ramirez Jacinto v Mexico, Friendly Settlement, Report No. 21/
07 (2007).
224 Article 1, American Convention.
225 Article 8, American Convention.
226 Article 25, American Convention. See also Inter-American Convention on the Prevention,
Punishment and Eradication of Violence against Women Convention of Belem do Para 1994,
33 ILM 1534 (1994) (Convention of Belem do Para) at Article 4, which entered into force on
5 March 1995.
227 Article 11, American Convention; Article 4, Convention of Belem do Para; Article 12, UDHR;
and Article 17, ICCPR.
228 Article 7, American Convention; Article 9, ICCPR; and Article 3, UDHR.
229 Article 11, American Convention; Article 4, Convention of Belem do Para; Article 12, UDHR;
and Article 17, ICCPR.
230 Paulina, supra n. 223 at para. 16.

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The Inter-American Commission was called upon to address the right to access
abortion for women who have been raped in Paulina Ramirez v Mexico.
In 2002, a petition was filed with the Inter-American Commission on behalf
of a 13-year-old girl who was raped and then denied an abortion due to state
health and justice authorities personal and religious beliefs, despite Mexicos
legal exception for pregnancies resulting from rape.223
The petition alleged that Mexico violated its obligation to respect and guarantee the rights under the American Convention224 due to its lack of judicial
guarantees225 and protection.226 Specifically, it alleged that the Mexican
state of Baja California lacked a clear procedure with respect to the rape
exception of its abortion law, and lacked a sufficient, expedient and effective
remedy permitting the timely guarantee of the right to a legal abortion.
These omissions arguably enabled public officials to act arbitrarily in cases of
rape and neglect their obligation to respect and guarantee the rights to physical and psychological integrity,227 liberty, informed consent,228 honour, dignity
and privacy.229
After almost two years of negotiations, the parties resolved the dispute
through a friendly settlement, before the Inter-American Commission rendered
a decision. In that settlement, the Mexican government conceded generally to
the above listed human rights violations and agreed to a number of groundbreaking reparations. For example, the government agreed to compensate
Paulina for legal, medical, cost of living, mental health and educational
expenses incurred by her and her son.230 The government also agreed to
assist her with professional development, provide a one-time payment for
moral damages, issue a public acknowledgment of responsibility and issue

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African system
The African Womens Protocol explicitly articulates womens right to abortion
calling on States Parties to take all appropriate measures to . . . [authorise]
medical abortion in cases of sexual assault, rape, incest . . ..235 The Protocols
inclusion of sexual assault as a legal basis for abortion is particularly notable,
as sexual assault covers a broader range of sexual conduct, thus potentially
further expanding womens abortion rights. Nevertheless, until the African
Commission issues a report interpreting the Protocols provisions, perhaps in
response to a Member States biennial report regarding compliance with the
African Charter and the Protocol, or a case is brought before the African
Commission, the extent to which the African Womens Protocols provisions
will be interpreted and applied remains unclear.236
E. Abortion Based on Foetal Impairment
Similar to rape and incest, foetal impairment is increasingly being
recognised as a valid basis for abortion by international and regional
treaty-monitoring bodies. The HRC was specifically called upon to address
231 Ibid. Note that application of the guidelines regulating access to abortion in the context of
rape, is limited to the Mexican state of Baja California.
232 Ibid. at paras 20^3. The Inter-American Commissions 2007 Case Report indicates that while
the Baja California Government has essentially complied with the settlements provisions,
the Commission will continue to monitor the Governments compliance with its obligations
to assist Paulina with professional development and to lobby the legislature for legislative
change.
233 Ibid. at Annex ^ Official Journal ^ Public Acknowledgment of Responsibility.
234 Ibid. at para. 25.
235 Article 14.2(c), African Womens Protocol.
236 Ngwena, Paper presented to the Center for Reproductive Rights: Access to Abortion Services
and the Protocol to the African Charter on the Rights of Women in Africa: Opportunities
and Challenges, 23 August 2007 at 7 (document on file at the Center for Reproductive
Rights).

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a decree regulating guidelines for access to abortion for women who have been
raped.231 To date, the government has complied with almost all of the
settlements provisions.232
The Paulina case marks the first time a Latin American government conceded that the absence of an appropriate body of regulations concerning abortion resulted in the violation of . . . human rights.233 The Inter-American
Commission expressed great appreciation to both parties for reaching a
friendly settlement which was compatible with the American Conventions
object and purpose, and stated: The achievements secured through the actions
and good disposition of the two parties . . . offer a significant example to be followed in other cases ^ both those that involve Mexico as well as other cases
from other regions and countries of the hemisphere.234

Abortion as a human right

285

rights violations based on a denial of abortion of a fatally impaired foetus in KL


v Peru.
(i) International human rights parameters

(ii) Regional human rights parameters


European system
The ECtHR has yet to confirm womens right to access abortion in the context
of foetal impairment. In 2005, the issue was brought to the ECtHR in D. v
Ireland, by an Irish woman pregnant with twins diagnosed with a fatal foetal
condition.239 While she was devastated by the loss of her twins and dismayed
by the prospect of carrying the pregnancy to term D travelled to the United
Kingdom to obtain an abortion, as Irish law does not permit abortion in
instances of foetal impairment.240 The applicant subsequently filed an application to the ECtHR asserting that Irelands ban on abortion, unless performed
to save a womans life, infringed on her rights under Articles 3 (prohibition of
inhuman and degrading treatment), 8 (respect for private life) and 14 (principle
of non-discrimination) of the ECHR.241
237
238
239
240
241

KL v Peru, supra n. 123 at para. 6.3.


Ibid.
D. v Ireland, supra n. 82 at para. 3.
Ibid. at para. 4.
Ibid. at para. 62. The applicant also argued, at paras 59 and 62, that Irelands Regulation of
Information Act, which prohibits providers from fully discussing abortion with their patients
or making referrals for abortion services outside the country when requested, infringed
Article 10 (freedom of expression) because her obstetrician in Ireland was prohibited from
referring her to a hospital abroad for termination.

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No treaty-monitoring body has directly addressed in Concluding Observations


or General Recommendations, abortion in the context of foetal impairments.
However this issue has been raised in analyses of womens rights to health
and to be free from inhuman and degrading treatment. For example, in KL v
Peru the HRC deemed Perus denial of a therapeutic abortion to a girl pregnant
with a fatally impaired foetus, a violation of the ICCPRs Article 7 prohibiting
inhuman and degrading treatment.237 The Committees decision hinged on
the fact that carrying an impaired foetus caused KL immense mental distress
that was foreseeable and preventable.238 Thus, while at present, foetal impairment is not recognised as an independent basis for abortion, other than in
the African Womens Protocol, the HRC in KL articulated the important intersections between foetal impairment, womens mental and physical health and
rights to privacy and to be free from inhuman and degrading treatment.
In turn, KL opened the door for more expansive discussions of foetal impairment as an independent basis for abortion.

286

HRLR 8 (2008), 249^294

African system
Unlike other regional human rights systems, the African Womens Protocol is
the only human rights instrument that explicitly supports womens right to
access to abortion where the continued pregnancy endangers the . . . life
of . . . the foetus.248 A plain reading of the Protocols language appears to only
require access to abortion where there is threat of foetal mortality, as opposed
to simply foetal impairment. If that is the case, a woman carrying an impaired
foetus could potentially be forced to carry the pregnancy to term. However, as

242
243
244
245
246

Ibid. at para. 62. See also Article 35(1), ECHR.


Ibid. at para. 80.
Ibid. at para. 83, citing Selmouni v France 1999-V 151; (2000) 29 EHRR 403 at paras 74^7.
Ibid. at para. 92.
Attorney General v X, supra n. 82, concerning a 14-year-old girl who became pregnant as a
result of being raped and consequently became suicidal. The Supreme Court held that being
suicidal constituted a real and substantial risk to life, as distinct from health, which could
only be averted by termination of pregnancy.
247 D. v Ireland, supra n. 82 at paras 88^102.
248 Article 14.2(c), African Womens Protocol.

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The ECtHR in Ds case never reached the merits of the case because it found
that the applicant failed to exhaust domestic remedies.242 According to the
applicant, she never sought recourse within an Irish court as she believed her
efforts would have been futile because there was no prospect of success, there
was insufficient time to seek a constitutional remedy due to the imminency of
her pregnancy, initiating such litigation would have disclosed her identity and
stirred immense national and international attention, thus disrupting her ability to care for her minor children, and it was highly likely that High and
Supreme Court costs would be awarded against her.243
In rendering its decision, the ECtHR emphasised that the ECHRs exhaustion
of domestic remedies requirement enables Member States to prevent or decide
alleged violations of domestic law, thus rendering the ECHR complaint
mechanism subsidiary to national systems safeguarding human rights.244 In
dicta, the ECtHR explained that the issue of abortion in situations of fatal
foetal abnormality was novel in Ireland, and thus, a legal constitutional
remedy was in principle available to . . . [D] to obtain declaratory and mandatory orders with a view to obtaining a lawful abortion in Ireland.245 The
ECtHR appeared to disregard the overall dismal picture of access to abortion
in Ireland to come to this conclusion, by asserting that under Attorney
General v X246 the Supreme Court could have potentially developed the issue
of abortion in the context of foetal anomaly, court procedures could have
been used to protect Ds identity, and lack of financial resources did not absolve
applicants from attempting legal proceedings.247

Abortion as a human right

287

the Protocol has not yet been tested, it is unclear how broadly this provision
will be interpreted.
F. Abortion for Socio-Economic Reasons and Upon Request

3. Punishment of Women who Undergo Illegal Abortions


A. International Human Rights Parameters
In recent years, laws that criminalise or penalise abortion have come under fire
within the human rights community. There is an increasing awareness that
249 Ngwena, supra n. 36 at 3.
250 Ibid.
251 Ibid. at 9.

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No international or regional treaty explicitly recognise womens right to abortion for socio-economic reasons or on request and no treaty-monitoring body
has interpreted any provision of any treaty to require as such. The right to
voluntary motherhood and thus the right to decide to obtain an abortion is
arguably integral to a constellation of other fundamental human rights such
as womens right to equality, life, health, security of person, private and family
life, freedom of religion, conscience and opinion, and freedom from slavery, torture and cruel, and inhuman and/or degrading treatment. Moreover, womens
right to self-determination falls under the overarching freedom in decisionmaking about private matters. Such provisions include protections of the right
to physical integrity, the right to decide freely and responsibly the number
and spacing of ones children and the right to privacy.
International treaties such as the ICCPR, ICESCR, ICEDAW and ICRC safeguard the above-listed rights and thus can be relied upon when attempting to
secure womens right to abortion on request or for socio-economic reasons.
Furthermore, Concluding Observations which recognise that restrictive
abortion laws could violate womens right to health and life, can also be
relied upon to support womens right to choose abortion on request or for
socio-economic reasons. Some assert that the African Womens Protocol is the
first human rights instrument to confirm that abortion is a health issue
that takes the form of a socio-economic right.249 If that is the case, States
Parties to the Protocol have an obligation to both decriminalise abortion and
incorporate abortion services within mainstream health services.250 Arguably,
this also requires States Parties to permit abortions based on social and economic grounds such as a womans economic resources, age, number of children
and/or marital status. If, however, the Protocol is not interpreted to recognise
socio-economic grounds for abortion, then the asserted socio-economic basis
can and should be subsumed under physical or mental health grounds.251

288

HRLR 8 (2008), 249^294

252 Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding: El Salvador, 22 August 2003, CCPR/CO/78/
SLV at para. 14; Kuwait, 19 July 2000, CCPR/CO/69/KWT, A/55/40 at para. 15; Lesotho, 8
April 1999, CCPR/C/79/Add.106 at para. 11; Poland, 29 July 1999, CCPR/C/79/Add.110 at para.
11; Senegal, 19 November 1997, CCPR/C/79/Add 82 at para. 12; and Venezuela, 26 April 2001,
CCPR/CO/71/VEN at para. 19.
253 Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding: Gambia, 12 August 2004, CCPR/CO/75/GMB
at para. 17; Peru, 15 November 2000, CCPR/CO/70/PER at para. 20; and Poland, 2 December
2004, CCPR/CO/82/POL at para. 8.
254 Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding: Chile, 18 May 2007, CCPR/C/CHL/CO/5 at
para. 8; Madagascar, 11 May 2007, CCPR/C/MDG/CO/3 at para. 14; and Mauritius, 27 April
2005, CCPR/CO/83/MUS at para. 9.
255 Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding Guatemala, 27 August 2001, CCPR/CO/72/
GTM at para. 19.
256 Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding Mauritius, 27/04/2005, CCPR/CO/83/MUS at
para. 9.
257 Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding Poland, 2 December 2004, CCPR/CO/82/POL
at para. 8.
258 Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding: Guatemala, 27 August 2001, CCPR/CO/72/
GTM at para. 19; Kuwait, 19 July 2000, CCPR/CO/69/KWT, A/55/40 at para. 16; Lesotho, 8
April 1999, CCPR/C/79/Add.106 at para. 11; Trinidad and Tobago, 3 November 2000, CCPR/
CO/70/TTO at para 18; and United Republic of Tanzania, 18 August 1998, CCPR/C/79/Add.97
at para. 15.
259 Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding Mali, 16 April 2003, CCPR/CO/77/MLI at para.
14.
260 Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding: Gambia, 12 August 2004, CCPR/CO/75/GMB
at para. 17; and Peru, 15 November 2000, CCPR/CO/70/PER at para. 20.
261 Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding: Argentina, 3 November 2000, CCPR/CO/70/
ARG at para. 14; Chile, 30 March 1999, CCPR/C/79/Add.104 at para. 15; Costa Rica, 8 April
1999, CCPR/C/79/Add.107 at para. 11; Ecuador, 18 August 1998, CCPR/C/79/Add.92 at para.
11; Guatemala, 27 August 2001, CCPR/CO/72/GTM at para. 19; Kuwait, 19 July 2000, CCPR/
CO/69/KWT, A/55/40 at para. 16; Lesotho, 8 April 1999, CCPR/C/79/Add.106 at para. 11; Peru,
18 November 1996, CCPR/C/79/Add.72 at para. 22; Peru, 15 November 2000, CCPR/CO/70/
PER at para. 20; Trinidad and Tobago, 3 November 2000, CCPR/CO/70/TTO at para. 18;
United Republic of Tanzania, 18 August 1998, CCPR/C/79/Add.97 at para. 15; and Venezuela,
26 April 2001, CCPR/CO/71/VEN at para. 19.

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the criminalisation leads women to obtain unsafe, clandestine abortions, placing their lives and health at risk. While this issue has not been addressed by
regional human rights bodies, UN treaty-monitoring bodies have expressed great
concern regarding rising maternal mortality rates due to unsafe abortion, and
recommended that States Parties overturn abortion bans or decriminalise the
procedure when womens lives or health are at risk, or when the pregnancy
results from rape or incest, or in cases of foetal impairment.
The HRC has expressed concern regarding laws that criminalise or severely
restrict abortion,252 even in circumstances of rape,253 or when the pregnant
womans life is in danger.254 The HRC has asserted that legislation criminalising255 or penalising256 abortion leads women to undertake life-threatening
abortions,257 and referred to such laws as a violation of the right to life.258
In those circumstances, the HRC has recommended that States Parties
review259 or amend criminal legislation to establish exceptions to the prohibition260 and punishment of abortion,261 or to bring abortion laws in line with

Abortion as a human right

289

262 Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding: Chile, 18 May 2007, CCPR/C/CHL/CO/5 at
para. 8; El Salvador, 22 August 2003, CCPR/CO/78/SLV at para. 14; and Madagascar, 11 May
2007, CCPR/C/MDG/CO/3 at para. 14.
263 Concluding Observations of the HRC regarding Argentina, 3 November 2000, CCPR/CO/70/
ARG at para. 14.
264 HRC - General Comment No. 28, supra n. 34 at para. 20. See also Article 17, ICCPR.
265 Concluding Observations of the CEDAW regarding: Andorra, 31 July 2001, A/56/38 at para. 48;
Chile, 9 July 1999, A/54/38 at para. 228; Cyprus, 9 May 1996, A/51/38 at para. 55; Ireland,
1 July 1999, A/54/38 at para. 185; Jordan, 27 January 2000, A/55/38 at para. 180;
Liechtenstein, 1 February 1999, A/54/38 at para. 169; Luxembourg, 12 August 1997, A/52/38/
Rev.1, Part II at para. 210; Nepal, 1 July 1999, A/54/38 at paras 139, 147; United Kingdom,
1 July 1999, A/55/38 at para. 309; and Zimbabwe, 14 May 1998, A/53/38 at para. 159.
266 Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding Belize, 01 July 1999, A/54/38 at para. 56; and
Chile, 25 August 2006, CEDAW/C/CHI/CO/4 at para. 19.
267 Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding Colombia, 5 February 1999, CEDAW/A/54/38/
Rev.1 at para. 393.
268 Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding Colombia, 2 February 2007, CEDAW/C/COL/
CO/6 at para. 22.
269 CEDAW - General Rec, 24, supra n. 57 at para. 12(d).

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the ICCPR.262 The HRC has also recently acknowledged the discriminatory, disproportionate impact of restrictive abortion laws on poor, rural women.263
In the HRCs General Comment No. 28 on the equality of rights between
men and women, it observed that states may fail to respect womens privacy,
as protected under Article 17 of the ICCPR, when they impose a legal duty
upon doctors and other health personnel to report cases of women who have
undergone abortion.264
CEDAW has also criticised laws that criminalise, penalise and/or impose
punishment for abortion,265 and often frames such laws as a violation of the
rights to life and health.266 For example, in CEDAWs 1999 Concluding
Observations to Colombia, it noted with great concern that abortion, which is
the second cause of maternal deaths in Colombia, is punishable as an illegal
act[,] and asserted that legal provisions on abortion constitute a violation of
the rights of women to health and life and of article 12 of the Convention.267
On a positive note, CEDAW subsequently recognised in 2007 Colombias efforts
to enhance womens health, including sexual and reproductive health, by liberalising its abortion law in cases of serious malformation of the foetus or in
cases for rape . . ..268
CEDAW also expressed concern over the link between protecting womens
right to privacy in health-care matters, and abortions and womens health.
For example, in CEDAWs General Recommendation No. 24 on women and
health, it expressed concern that lack of confidentiality of patients may deter
women from seeking advice and treatment and thereby adversely affect their
health and well-being. Women will be less willing, for that reason, to seek medical care for . . . contraception or for incomplete abortion and in cases where
they have suffered sexual and physical violence.269 The Committee further
stated that [w]hen possible, legislation criminalizing abortion should be
amended, in order to withdraw punitive measures imposed on women who

290

HRLR 8 (2008), 249^294

270 Ibid. at para. 31(c).


271 Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding: Andorra, 31 July 2001, A/56/38 at para. 48;
Belize, 01 July 1999, A/54/38 at para. 57; Burkina Faso, 31 January 2000, A/55/38 at para.
276; Cameroon, 26 June 2000, A/55/38 at para. 60; Ireland, 1 July 1999, A/54/38 at para. 186;
Jordan, 27 January 2000, A/55/38 at para. 181; Namibia, 12 August 1997, A/52/38/Rev.1, Part
II at para. 127; Nepal, 1 July 1999, A/54/38 at paras 139 and 148; and United Kingdom, 1 July
1999, A/55/38 at para. 310.
272 Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding Belgium, 9 May 1996, A/51/38 at para. 181.
273 Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding Ireland, 1 July 1999, A/54/38 at para. 185.
274 Concluding Observations of CEDAW regarding Chile, 25 August 2006, CEDAW/C/CHI/CO/4 at
para. 19.
275 Ibid. at para. 20.
276 Concluding Observations of the CRC regarding: Armenia, 24 February 2000, CRC/C/15/
Add.119 at para. 38; Chad, 24 August 1999, CRC/C/15/A dd.107 at para. 30; Kyrgyzstan, 9
August 2000, CRC/C/15/Add.127 at para. 45; and Palau, 21 February 2001, CRC/C/15/Add.
149 at para. 46.
277 Concluding Observations of the CRC regarding: Chad, 24 August 1999, CRC/C/15/Add.107 at
para. 30; and Palau, 21 February 2001, CRC/C/15/Add.149 at para. 47.
278 Concluding Observations of the CESCR regarding: Bolivia, 21 May 2001, E/C.12/1/Add.60 at
para. 43; Mauritius, 31 May 1994, E/C.12/1994/8 at para. 15; Nepal, 24 September 2001, E/
C.12/1/Add.66 at paras 32 and 55; Poland, 19 December 2002, E/C.12/1/Add.82 at para. 29;
and Senegal, 24 September 2001, E/C.12/1/Add.62 at paras 26 and 47.
279 Concluding Observations of the CESCR regarding: Chile, 1 December 2004, E/C.12/1/Add.105
at para. 26; Malta, 14 Decemeber 2004, E/C.12/1/Add.101 at para. 41; and Monaco, 13 June
2006, E/C.12/MCO/CO/1 at para. 15.

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undergo abortion.270 CEDAW has specifically called upon States Parties to


review legislation making abortion illegal271 and praised States Parties for
amending their restrictive legislation.272 CEDAW has also examined the discriminatory effects of legislation making abortion illegal. For example, the
CEDAW has noted the disparate impact on asylum seekers.273
In CEDAWs recent Concluding Observations to Chile, it expressed concern
that abortion under all circumstances remains a punishable offence under
Chilean law, which may lead women to seek unsafe, illegal abortions, with consequent risks to their life and health, and that clandestine abortions are a
major cause of maternal mortality.274 In that regard, CEDAW recommended
that Chile consider reviewing abortion laws to remove punitive provisions
imposed on women who undergo abortion and provide them with access to
quality services for the management of complications arising from unsafe
abortion and to reduce maternal mortality rates, in accordance with general
recommendation 24, . . . and the Beijing Declaration and Platform of Action.275
The CRC has expressed concern over punitive abortion legislation276 and
has occasionally suggested that a State Party review its practices under existing abortion legislation.277
The CESCR has recognised that restrictive abortion laws or the criminalisation of abortion contribute to the problem of unsafe abortion and high rates
of maternal mortality.278 The CESCR has expressed concern to States Parties
with complete abortion bans,279 or criminal abortion laws that only permit

Abortion as a human right

291

280 Concluding Observations of the CESCR regarding Kuwait, 7 June 2004, E/C.12/1/Add.98 at
para. 23.
281 Concluding Observations of the CESCR regarding: Chile, 1 December 2004, E/C.12/1/Add.105
at para. 26; Kuwait, 7 June 2004, E/C.12/1/Add.98 at para. 23; Malta, 14 December 2004, E/
C.12/1/Add.101 at para. 43; Monaco, 13 June 2006, E/C.12/MCO/CO/1 at para. 15; and Nepal,
31 August 2001, E/C.12/1/Add.66 at paras 33 and 55.
282 GA Res. 39/46, 10 December 1984.
283 Concluding Observations of CAT regarding Chile, 14 June 2004, CAT/C/CR/32/5 at para. 6(j).
284 Ibid. at para. 7(m). CAT also recommended that Chile ensure immediate and unconditional
treatment of persons seeking emergency medical care, in line with World Health
Organization guidelines.
285 Open Letter from Human Rights Watch to the Nicaraguan Supreme Court, Amicus
Curiae Brief at 14, available at: http://hrw.org/pub/amicusbriefs/ nicaragua0807web.pdf [last
accessed 25 September 2007].
286 The Beijing Declaration and the Platform for Action, Fourth World Conference on Women,
Beijing, China, 4^15 September 1995, A/CONF.177/20 (1995) at para. 106(k).

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abortion to preserve a womens health.280 Similar to other treaty-monitoring


bodies, the CESCR has asked States Parties to legalise abortion when a pregnancy is life-threatening or the result of rape or incest.281
On a related note, the Committee against Torture and Other Cruel,
Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CAT), the oversight body
for the International Convention Against Torture and other Cruel,
Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment 1984 (ICAT),282 recently
issued a Concluding Observation to Chile expressing concern that life-saving
medical care for women suffering complications after illegal abortions is administered only on condition that they provide information on those performing
such abortions[,] and that such confessions are then used against women and
third-parties in legal proceedings, in violation of the ICAT.283 CAT called upon
Chile to stop the practice of extracting such confessions for prosecution purposes, investigate convictions where coerced statements were obtained and
admitted into evidence, and take remedial measures including nullifying convictions which are not in conformity with the Convention.284
In addition to the human rights issues addressed by treaty-monitoring bodies,
criminalising or penalising abortion can amount to a violation of womens right
to liberty under Article 9(1) of the ICCPR, which states that: No one shall be
deprived of his liberty except on such grounds and in accordance with such
procedures as are established by law. Imposing punishment for abortion is
arguably incompatible with the womans right to liberty because a woman can
be deprived of her liberty for simply having sought health services, an action
that forms part of her right to enjoy the highest attainable physical and mental
health.285 It also leads women to seek unsafe, clandestine abortions.
Criminal abortion laws were also addressed at the 1995 Fourth World
Conference on Women. During that conference, the international community
reiterated the tenets of the ICPD Programme of Action and urged governments
to consider reviewing laws containing punitive measures against women who
have undergone illegal abortions.286 Moreover, the Beijing Platform for Action

292

HRLR 8 (2008), 249^294

urges governments to understand and better address the determinants and


consequences of . . . abortion.287

4. Recent Advancements in Womens Right to Abortion

287 Ibid. at para. 109(i).


288 Center for Reproductive Rights, The Center for Reproductive Rights Commends Mexico
City for New Law Legalizing Abortion in First Trimester: Vote Follows Important
Decisions Acknowledging Reproductive Rights As Human Rights, Press Release, April 2007,
available at: http://www.reproductiverights.org/pr_07_0424MexAbortion.html [last accessed
7 September 2007].
289 Center for Reproductive Rights, Landmark Decision by Colombias Highest Court Liberalize
One of the Worlds Most Restrictive Abortion Laws: Colombias Constitution Requires
Government to Allow for Abortion in Some Cases, Press Release, May 2006, available at:
http://www.reproductiverights.org/pr_06_0511colombia.html [last accessed 7 September
2007].
290 Constitutional Court, Ruling C-355/2006, Presiding Judges: Jaime Araujo Renteria and Clara
Ines Vargas Hernandez, Concurring Opinion: Manuel Jose Cepeda Espinosa, Dissenting opinion: Rodrigo Escobar Gil, Marco Gerado Monroy Cabra and Alvaro Tafur Galvis. Colombias
Constitutional Court further stated that: Sexual and reproductive rights also emerge from
the recognition that equality in general, gender equality in particular, and the emancipation
of women and girls are essential to society. Protecting sexual and reproductive rights is a
direct path to promoting the dignity of all human beings and a step forward in humanitys
advancement towards social justice.

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While international and regional human rights standards regarding womens


right to abortion are incomplete, advocates should remain hopeful that
human rights advocacy is catalysing change at the national level around the
world. Below are a few recent examples of the progress that has been made
towards full recognition of abortion as a human right.
There have been particularly notable advancements within Latin America.
For example, following the landmark Paulina settlement and the KL v Peru decision, Mexico Citys legislature voted on 24 April 2007, to legalise abortion in
the first trimester.288 This was a groundbreaking decision for the region
where a womans request for abortion in the first trimester is only legal in
Cuba, Puerto Rico and Guyana, and where Chile, El Salvador and Nicaragua
explicitly prohibit abortion without even allowing exceptions for a womans
life or health. On a related note, in May of 2006, Colombias highest court
ruled that abortion must be permitted when a pregnancy threatens a womans
life or health, in cases of rape, incest and in cases where the foetus has malformations incompatible with life outside the womb.289 Until that time, Colombia
had criminalised abortion in all circumstances. The Constitutional Court decision was notable for referencing Colombias various treaty obligations related
to womens reproductive rights, and for making the significant statement that:
womens sexual and reproductive rights have finally been recognized as
human rights, and, as such, they have become part of constitutional rights,
which are the fundamental basis of all democratic states.290

Abortion as a human right

293

291 Vo v France, supra n. 102 at para. 85.


292 Women on Waves, Yes to Legalize Abortion in Portugal, Press Release, 10 April 2007, available at: http://www.womenonwaves.org/article-1020.1745-en.html [last accessed 25
September 2007].
293 BBC News, Portugal Abortion Law Put to Test, available at: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/
europe/6309139.stm [last accessed 25 September 2007]. For a significant judicial pronouncement in Europe, see Family Planning Association of Northern Ireland v Minister for Health
Social Services and Public Safety [2005] NI 188, where in October 2004 the Northern Ireland
Court of Appeal held that the Department of Health, Social Services and Public Safety of
Northern Ireland failed to perform its statutory duties to provide women seeking to undergo
lawful abortion with the health and personal services to which they are entitled.
Specifically, the Court found that the Department had failed to provide guidelines on local
availability of legal abortion services and failed to investigate whether women were receiving
satisfactory abortion related services. As a result, health care practitioners were confused
on the status of abortion in Northern Ireland and fearful of being held liable for potentially
breaking the law. Consequently, women were being denied services that they were legally
entitled to receive, and denied post-abortion care after having undergone abortions in
Britain.
294 Tysia c v Poland, supra n. 170 at paras 80 and 125^130.

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The European region has experienced both advancements and set-backs


over the last few years, with respect to womens right to access abortion. On a
positive note, within the Council of Europe, the Parliamentary Assembly
passed a resolution recommending that Member States ensure access to safe
and legal abortions in their countries, and the ECtHR in Vo v France signalled
its reluctance to apply ECHR protections to foetuses.291 At the national level,
in March of 2007, the Portuguese parliament voted to reform its abortion
law,292 which had criminalised the procedure except when a womans life or
health was at risk and in cases of rape, incest or foetal impairment.293 The
amended law now legalises abortion on request during the first 10 weeks of
pregnancy. This was a significant advancement for the mainly Roman
Catholic country that had one of Europes strictest abortion laws. The same
month, the ECtHR in Tysia c v Poland held Poland to its procedural obligations
under Article 8 (right to privacy) to establish effective procedures to facilitate
womens exercise of their legal right to abortion.294 The ECtHR declined, however, to find a substantive violation of the applicants ECHR rights, signalling
the ECtHRs unwillingness to tackle controversial issues related to abortion.
The African region has experienced the most significant legally binding
pronouncement of womens human rights with the ratification of the African
Womens Protocol which provides textual guarantees of womens reproductive
rights and a quasi-judicial procedure to enforce those rights. While the effectiveness of the Protocol has yet to be tested, it undoubtedly signifies the
winds of change in a region where womens reproductive capacities has led to
high rates of maternal mortality, discrimination and great mistreatment.
In Asia, Nepal took a bold step five years ago to legalise abortion on broad
grounds. In March of 2002, the country went from having one of the most
restrictive abortion laws in the world, where women were imprisoned for
abortion-related crimes, to amend its civil code to allow for abortion upon

294

HRLR 8 (2008), 249^294

295 Ipas, Nepal Celebrates One Year of Legal Abortion Services, 25 March 2004, available at
http://www.ipas.org/Library/News/News_Items/Nepal_celebrates_one_year_of_legal_abortion_
services.aspx [last accessed 25 September 2007].
296 Government of Nepal Ministry of Health and Population, World Health Organization and
Centre for Research on Environment Health and Population Activities, Unsafe Abortion:
Nepal Country Profile, July 2006. In February 2007, the Center for Reproductive Rights, the
Forum for Women, Law and Development and other concerned individuals filed a case with
the Supreme Court of Nepal calling on the government to rectify this situation and the resulting human rights violations: see Center for Reproductive Rights, Public Interest Litigation to
Secure Abortion Access in Nepal, Fact Sheet, 2007, available at: http://www.reproductive
rights.org/pdf/ww_nepal_abortion_factsheet07.pdf [last accessed 25 September 2007].
297 The Vatican is playing a formidable role in pressuring countries to limit womens access to
abortion. For example, when Amnesty Internationals campaign on violence against women
recognised that women must have access to safe and legal abortion services in cases of
unwanted pregnancy as a result of rape, sexual assault or incest, or when their life of
health is at risk, the Vatican accused the organisation of promoting abortion and urged
Catholics to stop donating to it: see, for example, BBC, Vatican Urges End to Amnesty Aid, 14
June 2007, available at: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6750887.stm [last accessed
6 February 2008].

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request for up to 12 weeks of pregnancy, and up to 18 weeks for rape, to save


the life or health of the pregnant woman, and in cases of severe foetal abnormality.295 On the down side, the right to legal abortion services is still not a reality for many women because the Nepalese government has neglected to fully
implement its own law. In fact, in a 2006 report, the government conceded
that women are still dying from unsafe abortions.296
Overall, there appears to be a global trend toward liberalising restrictive
abortion laws. Europe, however, the region with historically the most liberal
abortion laws, may be moving in the opposite direction. There seems to be
a contrary movement towards restricting countries abortion laws, particularly
in heavily Catholic countries.297 The lesson here is that womens right to
access abortion is always at risk, regardless of the current status of the law,
and thus, reproductive rights advocates must continue to zealously promote
and safeguard womens reproductive rights, and international and regional
human rights law can be a strong basis for doing so.

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