Dubai Telegraph - 'The battle is not over': US anti-abortion groups dig in for fight ahead

EUR -
AED 3.883446
AFN 71.895736
ALL 97.900638
AMD 411.253615
ANG 1.90568
AOA 964.776505
ARS 1059.179559
AUD 1.622625
AWG 1.897279
AZN 1.794959
BAM 1.957984
BBD 2.134981
BDT 126.360933
BGN 1.952776
BHD 0.398504
BIF 3064.552793
BMD 1.057289
BND 1.41652
BOB 7.333387
BRL 6.114624
BSD 1.057409
BTN 89.29813
BWP 14.386045
BYN 3.460359
BYR 20722.868637
BZD 2.131438
CAD 1.478328
CDF 3035.47747
CHF 0.934506
CLF 0.037204
CLP 1026.5747
CNY 7.654248
CNH 7.656799
COP 4647.515635
CRC 537.514753
CUC 1.057289
CUP 28.018164
CVE 110.53916
CZK 25.294629
DJF 187.901514
DKK 7.459164
DOP 64.018911
DZD 140.877325
EGP 52.381066
ERN 15.859338
ETB 128.751425
FJD 2.395923
FKP 0.834536
GBP 0.83492
GEL 2.881119
GGP 0.834536
GHS 16.87422
GIP 0.834536
GMD 75.067091
GNF 9125.463708
GTQ 8.163336
GYD 221.116616
HKD 8.229136
HNL 26.617242
HRK 7.541918
HTG 138.904923
HUF 407.915932
IDR 16767.866866
ILS 3.957687
IMP 0.834536
INR 89.227706
IQD 1385.577518
IRR 44503.944681
ISK 145.504269
JEP 0.834536
JMD 167.707047
JOD 0.749935
JPY 163.649346
KES 135.859859
KGS 91.447738
KHR 4283.078889
KMF 491.374875
KPW 951.559894
KRW 1474.675567
KWD 0.325064
KYD 0.881183
KZT 524.710108
LAK 23207.498531
LBP 94733.114058
LKR 307.643121
LRD 192.444637
LSL 18.973037
LTL 3.1219
LVL 0.639544
LYD 5.164848
MAD 10.575017
MDL 19.217434
MGA 4926.967975
MKD 61.463334
MMK 3434.034132
MNT 3592.6687
MOP 8.477055
MRU 42.212296
MUR 48.931243
MVR 16.345495
MWK 1834.396561
MXN 21.312159
MYR 4.729253
MZN 67.587204
NAD 18.978021
NGN 1775.828054
NIO 38.855402
NOK 11.632492
NPR 142.877408
NZD 1.79237
OMR 0.407066
PAB 1.057409
PEN 4.012387
PGK 4.252446
PHP 62.246315
PKR 293.715725
PLN 4.334931
PYG 8235.184869
QAR 3.849065
RON 4.976764
RSD 116.97634
RUB 106.338364
RWF 1448.486226
SAR 3.969218
SBD 8.849003
SCR 14.364561
SDG 635.957428
SEK 11.567035
SGD 1.416107
SHP 0.834536
SLE 23.947671
SLL 22170.831226
SOS 604.244517
SRD 37.574471
STD 21883.752116
SVC 9.252319
SYP 2656.470724
SZL 18.978078
THB 36.516676
TJS 11.239936
TMT 3.700512
TND 3.341085
TOP 2.476276
TRY 36.480924
TTD 7.180212
TWD 34.260928
TZS 2806.026596
UAH 43.654088
UGX 3893.342324
USD 1.057289
UYU 45.390625
UZS 13559.734259
VES 48.349526
VND 26860.432537
VUV 125.5235
WST 2.951519
XAF 656.708074
XAG 0.033917
XAU 0.000402
XCD 2.857377
XDR 0.804297
XOF 655.519126
XPF 119.331742
YER 264.163785
ZAR 19.106588
ZMK 9516.868831
ZMW 29.211409
ZWL 340.446696
  • CMSC

    -0.0140

    24.61

    -0.06%

  • RBGPF

    -0.4400

    59.75

    -0.74%

  • NGG

    0.6200

    63.52

    +0.98%

  • BCE

    0.0800

    27.31

    +0.29%

  • SCS

    -0.1350

    13.065

    -1.03%

  • BCC

    -3.6200

    137.92

    -2.62%

  • RIO

    0.0400

    62.16

    +0.06%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.23

    0%

  • RELX

    0.1900

    45.23

    +0.42%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1500

    6.7

    -2.24%

  • VOD

    -0.0400

    8.88

    -0.45%

  • AZN

    0.5050

    63.895

    +0.79%

  • GSK

    -0.1140

    33.576

    -0.34%

  • BP

    -0.4550

    28.965

    -1.57%

  • BTI

    0.2300

    36.91

    +0.62%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    24.39

    0%

'The battle is not over': US anti-abortion groups dig in for fight ahead
'The battle is not over': US anti-abortion groups dig in for fight ahead / Photo: SAUL LOEB - AFP

'The battle is not over': US anti-abortion groups dig in for fight ahead

It was their first march through the US capital since the Supreme Court gave them what they had been demanding for half a century -- but for anti-abortion activists gathered in Washington Friday, the mood was more dogged than triumphant.

Text size:

Seven months after the nation's highest judicial body gutted federal protections for nationwide abortion access, protesters outside the conservative-led institution allowed themselves a modest victory lap -- but most were focused on the fights ahead.

"We have a lot of work to do," said George Muench, a 74-year-old Catholic in a "March for Life" hat.

The march began in 1974 as a challenge to Roe v. Wade, a landmark Supreme Court ruling the previous year that guaranteed the right of American women to terminate their pregnancies.

Every January, activists from across the United States have descended upon the capital to walk to the courthouse's iconic front steps to urge the justices inside to reverse that decision.

On June 24 last year they got their wish. The high court, which had lurched to the right under hardline Republican former president Donald Trump, relented -- giving states the freedom to pursue their own abortion bans.

More than a dozen states immediately rushed to do exactly that.

For Barbara Countryman, who has not missed a "March for Life" in 20 years, the ambience was a touch more jubilant and the crowd a little younger than in previous years.

"We are celebrating the end of Roe, but we still have to convert all people's minds," she told AFP, surrounded by college students and teenagers, many of whom who had been bussed in by their Christian schools, with some brandishing banners that read: "I am the post-Roe generation."

But for 61-year-old Countryman, who regularly prays in front of clinics in her home state of Maryland, the slog is only beginning.

"I'll be here every year until I die. It's never going stop -- it will always be a battle," she said gravely.

- 'Hearts and minds' -

"The debate around abortion is back into the states' hands," adds Richard Guill, a 50-year-old resident of Virginia, where a tussle over abortion access has ground into an entrenched stalemate between the Republican governor and the less conservative legislature.

Kathleen Pilie, 78, from New Orleans, is happy that Louisiana immediately enacted an abortion ban with no exceptions.

"Many states have abortion on demand still... the battle is not over for sure," she told AFP, cautioning against complacency in the long struggle for "hearts and minds."

As determined as Friday's "March for Life" crowd was, their position is in the minority in modern America.

Referendums on reproductive rights held since June have all been won by abortion rights advocates, including in conservative states like Kansas and Kentucky.

"Democrats turned it into a political issue, put a lot of money into the campaign and promoted the dangers of not having abortion rights," Muench complained.

Rosario Cazares, who flew to Washington from Texas with her mother Virginia, acknowledges there are unpopular elements of the anti-abortion stance -- under some states' laws, abortions are not allowed even in cases of rape or incest.

For the 27-year-old public health student, though, the debate is not a zero-sum struggle, but an opportunity to work for a more just society.

"We also have to make sure that we are helping these women," she said, calling for more assistance for young mothers.

Cazares said she wants to open her own "pregnancy center" one day. In the meantime, the fight goes on.

"We will march year after year," one speaker told the crowd outside the Supreme Court.

From Sunday, the 50th anniversary of the Roe v. Wade decision, the other side gets its turn, with pro-abortion rights demonstrators planning to rally in cities across the country.

O.Mehta--DT