The Prague Post - 'Just the beginning': US anti-abortion camp expands fight

EUR -
AED 4.291355
AFN 74.784992
ALL 96.063493
AMD 435.696104
AOA 1071.523836
ARS 1627.749166
AUD 1.657556
AWG 2.10624
AZN 2.040229
BAM 1.958088
BBD 2.329903
BDT 142.746814
BHD 0.441096
BIF 3437.802702
BMD 1.168511
BND 1.48583
BOB 7.993136
BRL 6.024372
BSD 1.156767
BTN 107.523591
BWP 15.785582
BYN 3.400716
BYR 22902.806195
BZD 2.326499
CAD 1.619959
CDF 2687.574483
CHF 0.92161
CLF 0.027136
CLP 1071.477273
CNY 8.01294
CNH 7.974728
COP 4313.194347
CRC 536.629401
CUC 1.168511
CUP 30.965529
CVE 110.37462
CZK 24.410126
DJF 205.993368
DKK 7.472631
DOP 70.272421
DZD 154.688644
EGP 62.168416
ERN 17.527658
ETB 180.62405
FJD 2.588137
FKP 0.882496
GBP 0.86995
GEL 3.131878
GGP 0.882496
GHS 12.733647
GIP 0.882496
GMD 85.882828
GNF 10147.815304
GTQ 8.849076
GYD 241.980326
HKD 9.153837
HNL 30.717027
HRK 7.537126
HTG 151.656577
HUF 378.591562
IDR 19860.0048
ILS 3.603382
IMP 0.882496
INR 108.206994
IQD 1515.377353
IRR 1537613.780615
ISK 143.796926
JEP 0.882496
JMD 182.092013
JOD 0.828485
JPY 184.959442
KES 151.414979
KGS 102.186468
KHR 4635.397085
KMF 498.953738
KPW 1051.646494
KRW 1726.760574
KWD 0.361268
KYD 0.963985
KZT 537.543573
LAK 25521.042269
LBP 103590.455695
LKR 365.019685
LRD 212.838705
LSL 19.547359
LTL 3.450308
LVL 0.70682
LYD 7.393735
MAD 10.847097
MDL 20.209617
MGA 4831.687654
MKD 61.566796
MMK 2453.879589
MNT 4173.431697
MOP 9.33599
MRU 45.970918
MUR 54.639673
MVR 18.053353
MWK 2005.861213
MXN 20.393195
MYR 4.647195
MZN 74.726883
NAD 19.547276
NGN 1613.420608
NIO 42.569565
NOK 11.195385
NPR 172.04679
NZD 2.00742
OMR 0.449244
PAB 1.156722
PEN 3.96203
PGK 5.077978
PHP 69.370945
PKR 325.235545
PLN 4.261739
PYG 7500.701121
QAR 4.228399
RON 5.094939
RSD 117.352368
RUB 91.908066
RWF 1689.667313
SAR 4.385217
SBD 9.404854
SCR 16.033437
SDG 702.274291
SEK 10.831263
SGD 1.488846
SLE 28.744003
SOS 661.069697
SRD 43.752571
STD 24185.808554
STN 24.528874
SVC 10.121872
SYP 129.178085
SZL 19.543089
THB 37.346177
TJS 11.006344
TMT 4.101472
TND 3.404276
TRY 52.043112
TTD 7.849173
TWD 37.110741
TZS 3043.969676
UAH 50.271878
UGX 4343.313614
USD 1.168511
UYU 46.912614
UZS 14112.612759
VES 553.251402
VND 30770.387527
VUV 139.544622
WST 3.237841
XAF 656.721634
XAG 0.015164
XAU 0.000244
XCD 3.157958
XCG 2.084845
XDR 0.816761
XOF 656.732888
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.748214
ZAR 19.179
ZMK 10517.997684
ZMW 22.413
ZWL 376.259911
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    22.14

    -0.18%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    12.69

    -0.32%

  • BCC

    0.9600

    74.71

    +1.28%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    22.29

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2400

    15.75

    -1.52%

  • RIO

    0.6500

    94.66

    +0.69%

  • GSK

    -0.5300

    55.84

    -0.95%

  • BCE

    -0.4300

    23.83

    -1.8%

  • NGG

    0.4600

    87.52

    +0.53%

  • RELX

    -0.2500

    33.36

    -0.75%

  • VOD

    0.1700

    15.31

    +1.11%

  • AZN

    -2.0200

    200.81

    -1.01%

  • BTI

    0.0900

    58.8

    +0.15%

  • BP

    -0.2400

    47.24

    -0.51%

'Just the beginning': US anti-abortion camp expands fight
'Just the beginning': US anti-abortion camp expands fight / Photo: Bastien INZAURRALDE - AFP

'Just the beginning': US anti-abortion camp expands fight

Activist Lydia Heykamp goes door-to-door in a quiet Virginia suburb with a pressing message: now that the constitutional right to abortion has been overturned, the state must ban it outright.

Text size:

The 23-year-old is part of a new offensive in America's anti-abortion movement, as it pivots from the national stage following last year's Supreme Court decision ending the constitutional right to a termination.

"I was ecstatic," Heykamp told AFP. But, she says, "that was just the beginning."

"I don't think I could stay silent and sit on the sidelines."

In overturning Roe v. Wade, the court placed reproductive rights in the hands of individual US states: some quickly banned the procedure, but others moved to protect it.

"The movement is still pretty far away from what it wants, which is a nationwide ban on abortion," said Mary Ziegler, a law professor at the University of California, Davis, who studies reproductive politics.

In a country where the majority believe abortion should be legal in most cases, activists such as Heykamp have refocused their efforts on state legislatures, courts and local communities.

- '100 percent pro-life' -

The complexity of the task can be seen in the conversations between Heykamp, dressed in a red T-shirt marked "Post-Roe generation votes," and affluent residents outside Virginia's state capital Richmond.

She and fellow volunteers advocate for Mark Earley, a candidate running for the Virginia House of Delegates in November, who calls himself "100 percent pro-life," and were targeting homes identified as likely leaning Republican.

Like the candidate, Heykamp -- a volunteer with Students for Life Action, a prominent anti-abortion advocacy group -- believes in a blanket ban, even in cases of rape or incest.

"Abortion is an act of violence against human life, another act of violence doesn't fix the act of violence that was committed against the mother," she says.

For Heykamp, one source of her passion is her younger sister who has Down syndrome -- most fetuses diagnosed with the disorder in the United States are aborted.

Most residents of the large houses on manicured lawns who opened their doors agreed with Heykamp on curbing abortion to some extent -- but not necessarily on a blanket ban.

Ken Johnson, 71, a retired cigarette manufacturer, was by and large opposed to abortion.

"If it's just 'got drunk Saturday night and forgot to take the pill,' I'm sorry, you got to think a little bit further ahead," he told AFP, as two small dogs barked inside his house.

But he also saw rape or incest as legitimate reasons to terminate a pregnancy.

"If a law has been broken, sure," Johnson said.

Shirley Miller, a retired school teacher in her late seventies, believes there are times when the well-being of the mother trumps that of the fetus, such as the case of a 10-year-old rape victim from Ohio.

That story caused a national uproar last summer when the girl had to travel out of state to have access to an abortion.

"What 10-year-old child needs to be a mother," Miller told AFP. "I agree with abortion in that case, wholeheartedly."

- Counseling against abortion -

In some states, anti-abortion legislators are focused on seeking outright bans -- but in others, they are fighting to restrict the procedure to the first weeks of pregnancy, as well as weaken exceptions when it is allowed. There is also an effort to ban abortion pills.

"We will move legislation that we think will pass in one state, but it may not pass in another," said Laura Echevarria, communications director with the National Right to Life, the largest US anti-abortion group.

Anti-abortion activists are also working to increase support for pregnant women through crisis centers, where they are provided with limited medical services -- such a pregnancy test and a viability ultrasound -- and are counseled against abortion.

Abortion rights advocates accuse such centers, which are usually religiously affiliated and have little government oversight, of pressuring women into remaining pregnant.

Ten years ago Justine Norman, 34, showed up at such a clinic in Severna Park, Maryland, east of the US capital, run by the Christian faith-based non-profit Wellspring Life Ministry.

Struggling with an addiction and unable to make ends meet, Norman first contemplated an abortion. But after a conversation on religion at the clinic and hearing the fetus' heartbeat, Norman decided to keep the child -- a decision that now fills her with happiness.

The girl, Kaylee, is now nine years old, and Norman has two younger daughters.

"That was all because of the counseling and the volunteers here," Norman, who now opposes abortion, told AFP.

Roe may be overturned, but Norman believes the battle to ban abortion in the United States is far from over.

"We need to fight harder than ever right now," she said.

S.Janousek--TPP