Jail term upheld for El Salvador woman convicted in death of child she said was stillborn
Prosecutors said Teodora Vasquez strangled the baby after it was born in 2007
SAN SALVADOR:
A tribunal in El Salvador on Wednesday upheld a 30-year prison sentence for a woman convicted of aggravated homicide in the death of her child who she said was stillborn.
"It is deeply tragic, and very unjust," Ina Strom, spokeswoman for Amnesty International, said after the ruling, which provoked condemnation from human rights groups.
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Prosecutors said Teodora Vasquez strangled the baby after it was born in 2007. Her lawyers said she suffered health complications and suffered a stillbirth.
The tribunal heard testimony from three doctors in an appeal but ruled there were no problems with the prosecution case. Since 1997, El Salvador has had one of the world's most severe laws against women who have abortions or are suspected of assisting them.
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The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights said in November that he was appalled that women were being punished for apparent miscarriages and other obstetric emergencies under anti-abortion laws. He called on authorities to review all cases of women detained for offenses related to abortion, which the local Citizen Group for the Decriminalization of Abortion puts at 27 instances in which poor women have been sentenced to jail terms of six to 35 years.
A tribunal in El Salvador on Wednesday upheld a 30-year prison sentence for a woman convicted of aggravated homicide in the death of her child who she said was stillborn.
"It is deeply tragic, and very unjust," Ina Strom, spokeswoman for Amnesty International, said after the ruling, which provoked condemnation from human rights groups.
UN calls on El Salvador to stop jailing women for abortion
Prosecutors said Teodora Vasquez strangled the baby after it was born in 2007. Her lawyers said she suffered health complications and suffered a stillbirth.
The tribunal heard testimony from three doctors in an appeal but ruled there were no problems with the prosecution case. Since 1997, El Salvador has had one of the world's most severe laws against women who have abortions or are suspected of assisting them.
Honduras election tribunal says to hold partial re-count in presidential vote
The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights said in November that he was appalled that women were being punished for apparent miscarriages and other obstetric emergencies under anti-abortion laws. He called on authorities to review all cases of women detained for offenses related to abortion, which the local Citizen Group for the Decriminalization of Abortion puts at 27 instances in which poor women have been sentenced to jail terms of six to 35 years.