12/18/03 - Center Praises FDA Panels’ Recommendations to Make Emergency Contraception Over-The-Counter
12/3/03 - Ninth Circuit to Hear Oral Argument Against Arizona's Regulation of Abortion Clinics
11/24/03 - Hearing Set in Legal Challenge to Kansas Law that Violates Teens’ Rights to Confidential Health Care
11/21/03-Hearing Set in Court Challenge to Virginia’s Abortion Ban
11/14/03 - Tenth Circuit Asked to Uphold Decision Striking Down Oklahoma Parental Consent for Abortion Law
11/7/03 - Federal Abortion Ban Blocked by Judges in Nebraska, New York and California
11/5/03 - Federal Abortion Ban Blocked by Nebraska Judge Minutes After President Bush Signs it into Law
11/4/03 - Nebraska Doctor Takes Federal Abortion Ban to Court
11/4/03 - President Bush Scheduled to Sign Abortion Ban into Law
11/3/03 - Hearing Set in Legal Challenge to First-Ever Federal Abortion Ban
10/31/03 - Nebraska Doctor Challenges Federal Abortion Ban in Court Today
10/31/03 - FIRST-EVER FEDERAL ABORTION BAN CHALLENGED
10/30/03 - Council of Europe Finds Evidence of Forced Sterilization of Romani Women in Slovakia
10/28/03 - Slovak Investigation Covers Up Human Rights Abuses
10/22/03 - Center Vows to Challenge Unconstitutional Abortion Ban Inching Toward President's Desk
10/20/03 - Women’s Health Experts from Kenya and Peru Speak Out on the Impact of the Global Gag Rule
10/15/03 - Alaska Court Protects Young Women's Right to Abortion
10/6/03 - Doctors and Counselors Fight Kansas Law that Violates Teens' Rights to Confidential Health Care
10/3/03 - Center Vows to Challenge Unconstitutional Abortion Ban Inching Toward President's Desk
10/1/03 - Unconstitutional Ban on Safe Abortion Procedures Heads Towards President's Desk
9/24/03 Indiana Supreme Court Expands Medicaid Funding for Abortion
9/23/03 - North Dakota Supreme Court Throws out Abortion-Breast Cancer Lawsuit Against Clinic
9/18/03 - As Congress Moves to Pass Dangerous Abortion Ban, Center Prepares Court Challenge to Protect Women's Health
9/16/03 - Alabama Taxpayers Forced to Pay for State-Mandated, Ideological Materials on Abortion
9/16/03 - Abortion Providers Ask Appeals Court to Affirm Ruling Striking Down Florida’s Biased Counseling Law
9/04/03 - Young Mexican Rape Victim Speaks Out on Her 18th Birthday, Urging the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights to Formally Admit Her Case
9/3/03 - Sex Discrimination Continues in Florida After Court Refuses to Overturn Ban on Medicaid Funded Abortions
9/2/03 - Fifth Circuit Set to Hear Case Involving Prison Inmate Forced to Carry Pregnancy to Term
8/27/03 - International Human Rights Settlement Expected to Improve Women’s Access to Reproductive Health Care in Peru
8/21/03 - ACLU, Center for Reproductive Rights, and Florida NOW Say Appointing a Guardian for a Fetus Threatens the Health and Rights of Pregnant Women in Florida
7/28/03 - Judge Orders Alabama to Absorb Costs of State-Mandated, Ideological Materials on Abortion and Pregnancy
7/22/03 - Human Rights Groups Call on Slovakia to Address Illegal Sterilization of Romani Women
7/15/03 - U.S. House Compromises Women's Lives by Refusing to Reinstate Funding for UNFPA
7/10/03 - Four Women Imprisoned for Abortion Granted Amnesty by Nepal's King
7/10/03 - Florida Supreme Court Upholds Young Women's Constitutional Right to Abortion
7/10/03 - Senate Votes to Overturn the Global Gag Rule
7/9/03 - "Choose-Life" License Plate Scheme Halted in Louisiana
7/1/03 - Judge Enjoins Virginia’s Abortion Ban
7/1/03 - Nepal's King Urged to Continue Commitment to Human Rights by Releasing Women Imprisoned for Abortion
6/27/03 - Center Applauds Supreme Court Decision to Let Judgement Stand in Nuremberg Case
6/26/03 - U.S. Supreme Court Reaffirms American's Right to Privacy in Landmark Case
6/24/03 - Argument Set for Court Challenge to Louisiana's Speciality License Plates
6/18/03 - Virginia's Abortion Ban Challenged in Federal Court
6/17/03 - Abortion Clinic Asks Court to Affirm Ruling Rejecting Abortion-Breast Cancer Scare Tactic
6/17/03 - Groups Fight Efforts to Interfere With Care of Severely Disabled Rape Victim
6/16/03 - Court Challeng to Florida's Ban on Medicaid Funded Abortions
6/5/03 - House Passes Dangerous, Unconstitutional Abortion Ban
5/16/03 - ACLU and Center Admonish Florida for Failing to Protect Health and Rights of a Rape Victim
5/14/03 - Congress Urged to Lift Ban on Abortions at Military Facilities Abroad
5/14/03 - ACLU and Center Ask Court to Protect the Health and Rights of a Florida Rape Victim
5/6/03 - Women’s Access to Reproductive Health Care in MI no Longer at Risk After Law Suit Settled
5/2/03 - Bush Admin Urged to Implement HIV/AIDS Initiative Without Strings Attached
4/30/03 - Women in Indiana Forced to Make Two Trips to a Clinic in Order to Obtain an Abortion
4/28/03 - Supreme Court Upholds Threat to Abortion Patients’ Confidentiality
4/11/03 - Statement from Nancy Northup: Congress Threatens Young Women's Right to Choose Abortion
3/24/03 - Center's Expert Simon Heller to Testify Before Congress Against Abortion Ban
3/14/03 - Providers Challenge Michigan Law that Impairs Access to Reproductive Health Care
3/13/03 - Senate Passes Unconstitutional Abortion Ban
3/10/03 - Latin American Courts Violate Reproductive Rights
3/7/03 - Challenge to "Choose Life" License Plates Continues in Louisiana
3/7/03 - International Women’s Day Marred by Attacks on Women’s Reproductive Rights
3/3/03 - Indiana’s "Two-Trip" Requirement Temporarily Blocked after Clinics Challenge Law
2/26/03 - Center for Reproductive Rights Statement on U.S. Supreme Court Decision in Scheidler v. NOW
2/24/03 - Indiana Women Seeking Abortions to Face Burdensome "Two-Trip" Law
2/18/03 - Bush Strangles Efforts to Combat HIV/AIDS, Gender Violence and Maternal Mortality by Expanding the Global Gag Rule
2/18/03 - Prison Inmate Forced to Carry Pregnancy to Term Files an Appeal
2/13/03 - Unconstitutional Abortion Ban Introduced in US House
2/13/03-SC Doctors Ask US Supreme Court to Protect Private Medical Information
2/12/03 - Over The Counter Emergency Contraception Still Stalled Before Bush Administration FDA
2/6/03 - Slovak Government Officials Retaliate Against Romani Women and Legal Advocates for Exposing Human Rights Violations
2/4/03 - Rights Groups Target Maternal Death in Mali
1/28/03 - Romani Women Subject to Forced Sterilization in Slovakia
1/22/03 - Statement on Roe V. Wade’s 30th Anniversary
1/18/03 - War on Women's Reproductive Rights Detailed
1/15/03 - CRLP becomes the Center for Reproductive Rights
1/15/03 - Nancy Northup Begins Leadership as President of Center for Reproductive Rights
1/10/03 - Alaska’s Parental Consent Law Challenged in Superior Court
1/8/03 - 'Choose Life' License Plate Case Revived in Louisiana
1/2/03 - Texas Supreme Court Denies Funding for Medically Necessary Abortions
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International Human Rights Settlement Expected to Improve Women’s Access to Reproductive Health Care in Peru

Policy Changes Come After Coerced Sterilization Case that Ended in Death

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Yesterday, the government of Peru signed an agreement before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) that should bring about sweeping changes in Peru’s reproductive health policies, and improve women’s access to family planning and reproductive healthcare. In a landmark settlement involving the case of a woman who died after being coercively sterilized, Peru agreed to modify discriminatory legislation and policies including those that fail to ensure women’s rights as autonomous decision-makers. Though settlement negotiations were concluded last year, former Minister of Health Fernando Carbone refused to sign the agreement. During his tenure, Carbone was heavily criticized for refusing to provide poor women with contraceptives, opposing emergency contraception and spreading misinformation about condom use. He resigned as Minister of Health earlier this summer.

"This agreement has broad implications for the reproductive freedom of Peruvian women," said Luisa Cabal, Legal Adviser for Latin America and the Caribbean at the Center for Reproductive Rights, a co-petitioner in the case. "By signing this agreement, Peru has committed itself to immediately improving the quality of reproductive health care. We hope the government will take this obligation seriously," added Cabal.

The agreement comes after an international legal battle against the Republic of Peru involving the case of Maria Mamerita Mestanza Chavez, who died in April 1998 from complications after being coercively sterilized. The Peruvian government agreed to the settlement on October 14, 2002, which recognized its international responsibility for violating the victim’s human rights. The rights violated included, among others, the right to life, to physical integrity and humane treatment, to equal protection of the law, and to be free from gender-based violence.

"This agreement is very important for international human rights law, helping create precedent for future cases where reproductive rights violations occur in Latin America and around the world," said Maria Clara Galvis, Staff Attorney with the Center for Justice and International Law.

The Mestanza case was filed with the IACHR in 1999 after domestic legal remedies in Peru had failed. Mrs. Mestanza, a low-income, indigenous Peruvian woman, was coerced into agreeing to sterilization by government officials and was repeatedly denied follow-up medical care when complications ensued. She died from post-surgical medical complications seven days after her surgery.

In the settlement agreement signed today, the Peruvian government agreed to pay moral damages to Mestanza’s husband and seven children, as well as significant compensation for their health care, education and housing. The government also agreed to conduct an in-depth investigation and to punish those responsible for the violations of Peruvian and international legal standards.

Of most significance to the women of Peru, the government agreed to modify discriminatory legislation and policies and to promptly implement the recommendations made by Peru’s Human Rights Ombudsman. The Ombudsman’s recommendations include:

  • improving pre-operative evaluations of women being sterilized;
  • requiring better training of health personnel;
  • creating a procedure to ensure timely handling of patient complaints within the health care system; and
  • implementing measures to ensure that women give genuine informed consent, including enforcing a 72-hour waiting period for sterilization.

Mestanza’s case was part of a pattern of coercive sterilizations—a few leading to death, as in this instance—that occurred primarily between 1996 and 1998 during the regime of President Alberto Fujimori. The Center for Reproductive Rights, the Latin American and Caribbean Committee for the Defense of Women’s Rights (CLADEM), and the Flora Tristan Women’s Center first documented various forms of violence against women perpetrated in Peru’s public health care facilities in 1996-97 in Silence and Complicity, a report released in 1998. The Human Rights Ombudsman subsequently investigated and affirmed that such violations were occurring as a result of governmental policies. In July 2002, the current Peruvian government apologized for the violations of the predecessor government.

Joining the Center for Reproductive Rights in the petition to the IACHR on the Mestanza case was Estudio para la Defensa de la Mujer (DEMUS), CLADEM, the Asociación Pro Derechos Humanos (APRODEH), and the Center for Justice and International Law (CEJIL).

For more information about the protection of the rights of women through the interamerican system visit www.cejil.org