The article Human rights accountability for maternal death and failure to provide
safe, legal abortion: the significance of two ground-breaking CEDAW
decisions by Eszter Kismödi,
Judith Bueno de Mesquita,
Ximena Andión Ibañez,
Rajat Khosla and others was published in the latest issue of Reproductive Health Matters.
This is the abstract:
In 2011, the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) issued two landmark decisions. In Alyne da Silva Pimentel v. Brazil,
the first maternal death case decided by an international human rights
body, it confirms that States have a human rights obligation to
guarantee that all women, irrespective of their income or racial
background, have access to timely, non-discriminatory, and appropriate
maternal health services. In L.C. v. Peru, concerning a
13-year-old rape victim who was denied a therapeutic abortion and had an
operation on her spine delayed that left her seriously disabled as a
result, it established that the State should guarantee access to
abortion when a woman's physical or mental health is in danger,
decriminalise abortion when pregnancy results from rape or sexual abuse,
review its restrictive interpretation of therapeutic abortion and
establish a mechanism to ensure that reproductive rights are understood
and observed in all health care facilities. Both cases affirm that
accessible and good quality health services are vital to women's human
rights and expand States' obligations in relation to these. They also
affirm that States must ensure national accountability for sexual and
reproductive health rights, and provide remedies and redress in the
event of violations. And they reaffirm the importance of international
human rights bodies as sources of accountability for sexual and
reproductive rights violations, especially where national accountability
is absent or ineffective.
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