Brazil’s ugly abortion reality lost in election noise


RIO DE JANEIRO, (Reuters) –
It was a little-noticed  headline amid the daily crime, violence and accidents in Rio de  Janeiro’s rough outskirts — Adriana de Souza Queiroz, 26, dead  after a clandestine abortion went wrong.

Queiroz, who scraped a living handing out pamphlets and was  3 or 4 months pregnant, last month became one of the some 300  Brazilian women who die each year after back street abortions.

The issue of abortion in the world’s most populous Roman  Catholic country has been thrust into the spotlight by a  presidential election in which front-running candidate Dilma  Rousseff has been punished by religious voters for her past  support for decriminalizing the procedure.

Abortion rights groups have long argued the law does little  to prevent abortions in Brazil and mostly hurts poor women who  can’t afford safer, expensive underground clinics.

The health ministry says that about one in seven Brazilian  women under 40 have had at least one abortion and about a third  of all pregnancies end in the procedure.

That is in line with  the rest of Latin America, which has among the world’s highest  abortion rates despite it being mostly illegal, and compares to  about a fifth in the United States, where abortion is legal.

But with both Rousseff of the ruling Workers’ Party and her  opposition rival Jose Serra now vying ahead of the Oct. 31  runoff election to convince voters of their “respect for life”  and opposition to decriminalization, reform may now be off the  agenda for years.

When President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva came to power in  2003, many believed Brazil’s strict abortion laws could be  liberalized.
His Workers’ Party has consistently supported expanded  abortion rights and a bill to legalize abortions up to 12 weeks  from conception was sent to Congress in 2005, but it was  rejected and evangelical Christians have an increasingly  powerful bloc in Congress, and in election campaigns.

Hounded by rumors that she favors complete legalization of  abortions, Rousseff last week issued an open letter vowing not  send to Congress any bill to decriminalize the procedure.

Abortions are only allowed in Brazil in cases of rape and  when the mother’s life is in danger, and sometimes not even  then.