Roe v. Wade invalidated | Protesters gather in several states

(Washington) Supporters of the right to abortion mobilized in the United States on Saturday for a second day of demonstrations against the decision of the Supreme Court to pulverize what many believed to be a given.

Posted at 8:41 a.m.
Updated at 4:16 p.m.

Sylvie LANTEAUME and Maria DANILOVA
France Media Agency

By revoking its emblematic decision “Roe v. Wade”, which since 1973 had guaranteed the right of American women to have an abortion, the high court leaves the choice to the states whether or not to ban abortions in a deeply divided country.

Thousands of people gathered outside the Supreme Court in Washington on Saturday, surrounded by barriers and placed under police protection.


PHOTO ROBERTO SCHMIDT, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Pro-choice and anti-abortion protesters outside the US Supreme Court on Saturday.

“What happened yesterday is indescribable and disgusting,” exclaimed Mia Stagner, a 19-year-old political science student. “No woman should be forced to become a mother.”

Around her, defenders of the right to abortion chanted “separation of Church and State”, or even “my body, my choice”.

But if the decision horrified progressive activists, it delighted those who, especially on the religious right, had been fighting for its cancellation for decades. A few dozen anti-abortion people also came to court on Saturday.

“I believe in the sanctity and dignity of human life,” said Savannah Craven, anti-abortion activist with Live Action Group. “Life begins in the womb, life begins at conception”.

Several hundred abortion rights activists also gathered in Los Angeles and protests were planned in other cities, notably in the states which took advantage of the Court’s judgment to immediately ban abortions on their ground.

While clinics in Missouri, South Dakota or Georgia closed their doors one after the other, Democratic states, such as California or New York, pledged to defend access to abortions on their soil.


PHOTO ANGELA WEISS, FRANCE-PRESSE AGENCY

Protest outside the last clinic to perform abortions in St. Louis, Missouri

President Joe Biden said Saturday before flying to Europe to know “how painful and devastating this decision is for many Americans”.





“A Scary Moment”

On Friday, he called on Americans to defend the right to abortion during the midterm elections in November.

Defenders of the right to abortion also fear that the Supreme Court, with a clear conservative majority, will reverse other rights such as marriage for all or contraception.

“They attacked women. They are going to attack the LGBT community and contraception, ”said Caroline Keller, a protester met in front of the Supreme Court.

This prospect “worries us” and “we are going to have nightmarish situations”, recognized the spokesperson for the White House, Karine Jean-Pierre, on board Air Force One. “It’s a scary moment.”

On Friday, two demonstrations were marked by violence. In Cedar Rapids, Iowa, a pickup truck rammed into a group of protesters, injuring a woman, according to local media.


PHOTO ISACC DAVIS, VIA REUTERS

In Iowa, a van rammed into a group of protesters, injuring a woman, according to local media.

And in Arizona, police have admitted using tear gas to disperse protesters who “repeatedly banged on the windows of the state Senate.”


PHOTO ANTRANIK TAVITIAN, USA TODAY NETW VIA REUTERS

Police used tear gas to disperse protesters in Arizona.

In Los Angeles, a demonstration was dispersed in a muscular way by police officers equipped with batons.


PHOTO FREDERIC J. BROWN, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

A heavy police presence was at the scene of a protest in Los Angeles.

Poor and minorities penalized

According to the Guttmacher Institute, a research center that campaigns for access to contraception and abortion in the world, half of the States should ban abortions in the more or less short term.

Within hours Friday, at least eight states immediately made all abortions illegal.

Seven others have planned to do the same in the coming weeks, but in practice clinics there have already stopped performing abortions, as in Texas, the largest US state, where women seeking abortions will now have to have abortions. hundreds of miles to get to the nearest clinic in New Mexico.

In one part of the country, women wishing to have an abortion will be forced to continue their pregnancy, to manage clandestinely, in particular by obtaining abortion pills on the Internet, or to travel to other States where abortions will remain legal.

Anticipating an influx, these mostly Democratic states took steps to make abortions easier to access on their soil, and clinics began to shift their staffing and equipment resources.

But traveling is expensive and the Supreme Court ruling will further penalize poor or single-parent women, who are overrepresented in black and Hispanic minorities, abortion rights advocates point out.


source site-63