Why are so many pregnant persons approaching the courts for terminations? Do we need to remove time limits on abortions? Do abortion laws need to be delinked from criminal laws? How can access to safe abortions for all be improved? Dipika Jain and Alka Barua discuss in a conversation moderated by Zubeda Hamid. Edited excerpts.
Can we start with an overview of abortion laws in India?
Alka Barua: The law looks fairly liberal, but there isn’t broad and progressive interpretation at the ground level. And there are reasons for it. One, the law places decision-making authority primarily with the doctors. So this gives scope for refusal based on personal beliefs or misunderstanding of law or unawareness of law. The law’s implementation doesn’t take into account the fact that we have a shortage of certified providers and adequately equipped facilities. And this is particularly more so now when the gestational limit has been increased and later gestational terminations are more complex and require greater skills, better facilities. The law actually does not require providers to ask for consent, but to be on the safe side, providers ask for husband’s consent, parental involvement, particularly in case of adolescents and unmarried women. There is persistent stigma and criminalisation fear. As long as abortion remains linked to a criminal law, it is socially stigmatized. And many women delay care or seek unsafe pathways in such situations.
Is there a case to be made for the Supreme Court’s asking for the removal of the time limit on terminations of unwanted pregnancies in the case of minor rape victims?
Alka Barua: The law has not taken into account ground-level reality. There is no need for such rigid gestational limits for terminations, particularly in cases of sexual assault survivors, minors, or adolescents, etc. One reason is, they tend to come late: because of the trauma, the stigma, the lack of awareness about their entitlements under the MTP Act; in case of minors and adolescents, they often do not even know that they have conceived till late pregnancy. Then, most do not have access to resources; they have restricted mobility. Delayed access is not out of choice but because institutions, family structures, violence prevent them from timely access. And therefore, this kind of time limit actually perpetuates the violence which they are subjected to. We believe that risk should be assessed clinically. Does the service provider believe that termination can be provided? If it can be safely provided based on clinical judgment, then why this inflexible statutory cut-off? The intent of the law has to be interpreted more broadly rather than using it as a barrier to provide services.
Do healthcare providers feel they may be at risk of criminal proceedings if they proceed with abortions?
Alka Barua: The reason for this is not only lack of awareness about what their obligations are, what the service seekers’ entitlements are, but also lack of awareness among those who are enforcing the law at the ground level. Most service providers are worried about police involvement in cases of rape and minors. They are confused about documentation requirements. Then there are concerns about the uncertainty around pregnancies near the stipulated gestational limits. There are no clear protocols in place. All this, in addition to the fact that there is a social pressure, let’s not forget that doctors belong to the same society as [that of] service-seekers. All this leads to a chilling effect. They don’t want to provide services in such cases, particularly the later gestation cases.
Are there other countries that allow for abortion on a demand basis rather than on a conditional basis? Is that what a reproductive health rights framework looks like?
Alka Barua: Irrespective of what the law is, our experience is [that] when a woman decides to terminate a pregnancy, she does get it terminated. If restrictions are there, you are literally pushing the woman or the person seeking termination towards unsafe places or unsafe service providers. The MTP Act came into existence for preventing unsafe abortions and maternal deaths because of that. And if that very law, because of the conditions it has included in it, is leading service seekers towards unsafe practices, then the point is lost. I [also] just wanted to distinguish between refusal on any grounds, be it ethical or professional, skill level, and denial of access. An individual service provider may decline to perform a procedure to which they have objections personally. The law says nothing against it right now. But then they should be made to refer the case, or ask someone else in the facility to provide the services.
Would a law that lifts all conditions and allows for abortion on request be in conflict with the POCSO law where the State has to look into sexual assault?
Alka Barua: What happens is, they [minors] come fairly late, often, beyond the statutory limit. So they [end up] in such cases filing a petition. All that complicates the case further, because instead of it being confidential information, they have to go through legal labyrinthine to get services. The second thing is service providers themselves are very wary of providing services in these cases because the court may give the ruling, but this has not translated [into ground-level action]. The protocols have not kept in pace with the court rulings. They look for a directive from the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. As long as such written directives are not there, the protocols are not there, there would be some chilling effect on provision of services to minors. And mandatory reporting is still there, except that the identifiers are not there. So the person cannot be identified, but it is reported. Now, in a public sector service facility, it becomes very public. This kind of law creates more problems rather than easing access for legitimate services.
There have been differing judgments by the SC itself when it comes to abortion. Has there been confusion in the courts also?
Alka Barua: If a service provider is allowed a lot of major surgeries without necessarily referring to a medical board or a group of clinicians, why is it so necessary in case of 24 weeks plus gestation? That itself shows that your focus is not on the woman herself, but on the foetus. And that was not the intent of the MTP Act at all. Laws in India, as far as services are concerned, can only lead to a limited change in what happens at the ground level. What we need to understand is, what are the social barriers? What are the lived realities of women? And if you look at that then anything that is criminalised is not likely to translate into access to services. So, there is a complete disconnect in the way the law is being interpreted randomly across rulings, as it is evident in various rulings, and what is the ground reality.
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Dipika Jain is executive dean & professor of law, director, Centre for Justice, Law and Society, Jindal Global Law School; Alka Barua is abortion theme lead and steering committee member, CommonHealth India.


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