Chile's Pinera stokes abortion row over rape victim

10 July 2013 Last updated at 17:24 GMT

Pinera stokes Chile abortion rowSebastian Pinera at the National Press Club in Washington, 4 June

Chile's President Pinera outrages his critics by praising the maturity of a pregnant 11-year-old rape victim who says she is happy to have the child.

Sebastian Pinera at the National Press Club in Washington, 4 June Sebastian Pinera supports Chile's outright ban on abortion

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Chilean President Sebastian Pinera has praised as "brave and mature" a pregnant 11-year-old rape victim who said she was happy to have the child.
The girl said during a TV interview the child would be "like having a doll".
Experts criticised Mr Pinera's comments as having no scientific foundation.
Mr Pinera supports Chile's abortion laws, which outlaw the practice in all circumstances. His critics want it legalised in cases of rape, and want the girl to be allowed an abortion.
The 11-year-old girl appeared in a TV interview on Monday, saying: "I'm going to love the baby very much, even though it comes from that man who hurt me.
"It will be like having a doll in my arms."
The girl was raped repeatedly over a two-year period by her mother's boyfriend, who has since been arrested.
Mr Pinera said he had asked the health minister to personally look after the girl's health.
"She surprised us all with words showing depth and maturity when she said that, despite the pain caused by the man who raped her, she wanted to have and take care of her baby," he said.
Forensic psychologist Giorgio Agostini said the girl would not have the mental or emotional capacity to understand her situation.

Latin America's abortion laws

  • Outright ban in El Salvador, the Dominican Republic, Nicaragua, Chile, Honduras, Haiti, Suriname
  • Cuba, Guyana, Puerto Rico and Uruguay have most liberal laws
  • Brazil's senate is currently debating legalisation of terminations during the first 12 weeks
  • More than 4 million abortions carried out each year
  • Between 1995-2008 some 95% were considered to be unsafe
Sources: World Health Organization, Guttmacher Institute
"What the president is saying doesn't get close to the psychological truth of an 11-year-old-girl," he told the Associated Press news agency.
"It's a subjective view that is not based on any scientific reasoning."
The girl's case has already sparked a public debate about abortion.
Campaigners argue that the laws, which date back to the authoritarian rule of Gen Augusto Pinochet, should be changed to allow for abortions in cases of rape or when the mother's health is at risk.
Michelle Bachelet, the likely presidential candidate next year for the left-leaning opposition, supports the campaign.
Ms Bachelet earlier commented that the 11-year-old girl need to be protected.
"I think a therapeutic abortion, in this case because of rape, would be in order," she said.
Chile is one of seven Latin American countries where abortion is completely banned.
Last month, the case of a seriously ill woman in El Salvador made international headlines when the courts upheld the ban on abortion even though the woman's life was at risk and the foetus was unlikely to survive.
She was eventually allowed to have a caesarean section.
COPY  http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/

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