Wednesday, June 4, 2025

Abortion foes challenge Oaxaca vote for decriminalization

Religious organizations in Oaxaca are asking for an injunction against a law passed on Wednesday that legalized abortion in the state.

Jeshúa Rangel, a lawyer for the Catholic Archdiocese of Antequera, said the church has asked for an injunction, and that signatures are being gathered for a collective injunction as well.

Estefanía Ricci, spokesperson for the pro-life group Provida, said her organization will start a campaign to punish the Morena party, which controls the Oaxaca Congress, for passing the bill.

“With their actions, they’ve lost the people’s trust, so we are going to punish them at the ballot boxes,” she said.

Rodrigo Iban Cortez, president of the National Family Front, a conservative Catholic group, called the bill “completely illegal and arbitrary” because it violates language in the Oaxaca constitution that protects life starting at conception.

“You can’t decriminalize abortion with legislation, in the penal code, and keep penalizing it in the constitution, which wasn’t changed, and still protects life starting at conception,” he said.

Morena Deputy Hilda Pérez said Congress is planning to change the constitution to remove the contradiction. However, she added that according to current Supreme Court jurisprudence, the language in the state constitution is not legitimate grounds to strike down the law.

Source: Milenio (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Barbara forming

Tropical Storm Barbara could take form off the Guerrero coast this week

0
Though the chances of the low-pressure system developing into a hurricane are low, it has the potential to dump potentially dangerous amounts of rain on Mexico's Pacific Coast.
San Miguel de Allende town center

What’s news in San Miguel de Allende?

0
Infrastructure updates, the city's first Marriott and a global mathlete are just some of the latest pieces of news out of San Miguel de Allende.
Coca-Cola logo

Coca-Cola Mexico returns more than 4 million cubic meters of unused water

4
The soda bottler, often criticized for its water use, is one of several companies participating in the return of unused water from its concessions, and plans to become “water neutral” by 2030.