May 06, 2022

Abortion laws worldwide: In what countries is abortion legal? - NBC News

Tensions and emotions are running high in the U.S. after the leaked Supreme Court draft opinion published by Politico suggested that Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 ruling that established abortion rights nationwide, could be overturned this summer.

However, the U.S. is not alone in having a heated debate about abortion, and laws on the procedure differ in countries around the world. Regardless of the laws surrounding abortion, rates are similar in countries where abortion is restricted and those where the procedure is largely legal, according to the Guttmacher Institute, which supports abortion rights.

Here are some key facts on abortion laws in other countries, based on information from the Center for Reproductive Rights, the Guttmacher Institute, the World Health Organization and Reuters.

Abortion around the world

Prohibited

Allowed to save mother's life

Allowed to preserve health

Allowed for social or economic grounds

Available on request (with varying developmental limits)

Country Status
Afghanistan To save the mother's life
Albania On request (with varying developmental limits)
Algeria To preserve health
Andorra Prohibited altogether
Angola To preserve health
Antigua and Barbuda To save the mother's life
Argentina On request (with varying developmental limits)
Armenia On request (with varying developmental limits)
Australia On request (with varying developmental limits)
Austria On request (with varying developmental limits)
Azerbaijan On request (with varying developmental limits)
Bahamas To preserve health
Bahrain To save the mother's life
Bangladesh To save the mother's life
Barbados Social or economic grounds
Belarus On request (with varying developmental limits)
Belgium On request (with varying developmental limits)
Belize Social or economic grounds
Benin On request (with varying developmental limits)
Bhutan To save the mother's life
Bolivia To preserve health
Bosnia and Herzegovina On request (with varying developmental limits)
Botswana To preserve health
Brazil To save the mother's life
Brunei To save the mother's life
Bulgaria On request (with varying developmental limits)
Burkina Faso To preserve health
Burundi To preserve health
Cabo Verde On request (with varying developmental limits)
Cambodia On request (with varying developmental limits)
Cameroon To preserve health
Canada On request (with varying developmental limits)
Central African Republic To preserve health
Chad To preserve health
Chile To save the mother's life
China On request (with varying developmental limits)
Colombia On request (with varying developmental limits)
Comoros To preserve health
Congo (Brazzaville) Prohibited altogether
Congo (Kinshasa) To preserve health
Costa Rica To preserve health
Cote d'Ivoire To save the mother's life
Croatia On request (with varying developmental limits)
Cuba On request (with varying developmental limits)
Cyprus On request (with varying developmental limits)
Czechia On request (with varying developmental limits)
Denmark On request (with varying developmental limits)
Djibouti To preserve health
Dominica To save the mother's life
Dominican Republic Prohibited altogether
Ecuador To preserve health
Egypt Prohibited altogether
El Salvador Prohibited altogether
Equatorial Guinea To preserve health
Estonia On request (with varying developmental limits)
Eswatini To preserve health
Ethiopia Social or economic grounds
Fiji Social or economic grounds
Finland Social or economic grounds
France On request (with varying developmental limits)
French Guiana On request (with varying developmental limits)
Gabon To save the mother's life
Gambia To save the mother's life
Georgia On request (with varying developmental limits)
Germany On request (with varying developmental limits)
Ghana To preserve health
Greece On request (with varying developmental limits)
Greenland On request (with varying developmental limits)
Grenada To preserve health
Guatemala To save the mother's life
Guinea To preserve health
Guinea-Bissau On request (with varying developmental limits)
Guyana On request (with varying developmental limits)
Haiti Prohibited altogether
Honduras Prohibited altogether
Hungary On request (with varying developmental limits)
Iceland On request (with varying developmental limits)
India Social or economic grounds
Indonesia To save the mother's life
Iran To save the mother's life
Iraq Prohibited altogether
Ireland On request (with varying developmental limits)
Israel To preserve health
Italy On request (with varying developmental limits)
Jamaica Prohibited altogether
Japan Social or economic grounds
Jordan To preserve health
Kazakhstan On request (with varying developmental limits)
Kenya To preserve health
Kosovo On request (with varying developmental limits)
Kuwait To preserve health
Kyrgyzstan On request (with varying developmental limits)
Latvia On request (with varying developmental limits)
Lebanon To save the mother's life
Liberia To preserve health
Libya To save the mother's life
Liechtenstein To preserve health
Lithuania On request (with varying developmental limits)
Luxembourg On request (with varying developmental limits)
Madagascar Prohibited altogether
Malawi To save the mother's life
Malaysia To preserve health
Maldives On request (with varying developmental limits)
Mali To save the mother's life
Malta Prohibited altogether
Mauritania Prohibited altogether
Mauritius To preserve health
Mexico To save the mother's life
Moldova On request (with varying developmental limits)
Monaco To preserve health
Mongolia On request (with varying developmental limits)
Montenegro On request (with varying developmental limits)
Morocco To preserve health
Mozambique On request (with varying developmental limits)
Myanmar To save the mother's life
Namibia To preserve health
Nepal On request (with varying developmental limits)
Netherlands On request (with varying developmental limits)
New Zealand On request (with varying developmental limits)
Nicaragua Prohibited altogether
Niger To preserve health
Nigeria To save the mother's life
North Macedonia On request (with varying developmental limits)
Norway On request (with varying developmental limits)
Oman To save the mother's life
Pakistan To preserve health
Panama To save the mother's life
Papua New Guinea To save the mother's life
Paraguay To save the mother's life
Peru To preserve health
Philippines Prohibited altogether
Poland To preserve health
Portugal On request (with varying developmental limits)
Qatar To preserve health
Romania On request (with varying developmental limits)
Russia On request (with varying developmental limits)
Rwanda Social or economic grounds
Saint Kitts and Nevis To preserve health
Saint Lucia To preserve health
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Social or economic grounds
San Marino Prohibited altogether
Saudi Arabia To preserve health
Senegal Prohibited altogether
Serbia On request (with varying developmental limits)
Seychelles To preserve health
Sierra Leone Prohibited altogether
Singapore On request (with varying developmental limits)
Slovakia On request (with varying developmental limits)
Slovenia On request (with varying developmental limits)
Somalia To save the mother's life
South Africa On request (with varying developmental limits)
South Korea On request (with varying developmental limits)
South Sudan To save the mother's life
Spain On request (with varying developmental limits)
Sri Lanka To save the mother's life
Sudan To save the mother's life
Suriname Prohibited altogether
Sweden On request (with varying developmental limits)
Switzerland On request (with varying developmental limits)
Syria To save the mother's life
Taiwan Social or economic grounds
Tajikistan On request (with varying developmental limits)
Tanzania To save the mother's life
Thailand On request (with varying developmental limits)
Togo To preserve health
Trinidad and Tobago To preserve health
Tunisia On request (with varying developmental limits)
Turkey On request (with varying developmental limits)
Turkmenistan On request (with varying developmental limits)
Uganda To save the mother's life
Ukraine On request (with varying developmental limits)
Ukraine On request (with varying developmental limits)
United Arab Emirates To save the mother's life
United Kingdom Social or economic grounds
United States On request (with varying developmental limits)
Uruguay On request (with varying developmental limits)
Uzbekistan On request (with varying developmental limits)
Venezuela To save the mother's life
Vietnam On request (with varying developmental limits)
West Bank and Gaza To save the mother's life
Yemen To save the mother's life
Zambia Social or economic grounds
Zimbabwe To preserve health

Source: Center for Reproductive Rights

Graphic: Nigel Chiwaya / NBC News

Abortion is prohibited altogether in 24 countries. When people face barriers to obtaining safe abortions, they often resort to unsafe procedures, according to the WHO, and unsafe abortions are more common in countries with restrictive laws.

El Salvador

Abortion is a crime in El Salvador, which has some of the world’s most restrictive laws. They prohibit abortion even when pregnancy endangers a woman’s life or health or in cases of rape. The procedure has been banned without exception since 1998. More than 180 women who experienced obstetric emergencies were prosecuted for abortion or aggravated homicide in the last 20 years. Women accused of having had abortions have been convicted of homicide, sometimes with prison terms of up to 40 years, according to Human Rights Watch.

Malta

Women in Malta are denied access to abortion entirely, even if their lives are at risk. It is the only European Union member state that prohibits the procedure, and women who have an abortion face up to three years in jail.

Poland

Poland is a staunchly Catholic country and has some of the most restrictive laws in Europe. The law changed in 2021 to make it illegal to terminate pregnancies with fetal defects, and it is now only possible to get an abortion to save the life of a woman, to preserve her health or in cases of rape or incest.

African countries

In Africa, while unintended pregnancies have decreased by 15 percent over the last 30 years, abortions have increased by 13 percent, according to the Guttmacher Institute. Many African countries have restrictive laws on abortion, allowing the procedure only if a mother’s life is threatened, like in Nigeria, or in the cases of rape, incest or fetal defects, as in Botswana and Zimbabwe.

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Colombia

Colombia’s highest constitutional court ruled in February to legalize the procedure until the 24th week of pregnancy.

Mexico

Mexico’s Supreme Court unanimously ruled in September to decriminalize abortion. The procedure is allowed until up to the 12th week of pregnancy. In Mexico City, abortion was decriminalized in 2007.

Ireland

Ireland voted in 2018 to remove an abortion ban from its constitution. Abortion is now permitted up to the 12th week of pregnancy, when the health or life of the mother is at risk, or when the fetus has a congenital defect.

Argentina

Argentinian lawmakers in late 2020 passed a bill legalizing abortion until the 14th week of pregnancy and after that in certain circumstances.

In much of Europe, Canada and Australia, laws around abortion are somewhat similar to the U.S. in that there are few restrictions other than gestational limits. France, for example, has a gestational limit of 16 weeks, Spain’s limit is 14 weeks and Italy’s is 90 days.

In South Africa and Mozambique, abortion is permitted but limited to the first 12 weeks of pregnancy.

If the law in the U.S. changes with a Supreme Court ruling this summer, some states will likely change their restrictions on abortion. That means some areas of the U.S. could wind up with more restrictive laws on abortion than other developed countries, including neighboring Canada and Mexico.



source: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/countries-abortion-legal-illegal-laws-rcna27505

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