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El Salvador commutes woman’s 30-year abortion sentence

Teodora del Carmen Vasquez, left, hugs her mother shortly after being released from prison in Ilopango, El Salvador, on Thursday.
Teodora del Carmen Vasquez, left, hugs her mother shortly after being released from prison in Ilopango, El Salvador, on Thursday.
(Marvin Recinos / AFP/Getty Images)
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El Salvador’s Supreme Court on Thursday commuted the sentence of a woman serving 30 years in prison for what she says was a stillbirth.

The court ruled the evidence in the case did not prove she took any specific action to abort the pregnancy, which is illegal in El Salvador, and thus was eligible for a form of clemency.

Teodora del Carmen Vasquez said she was working in 2007 when she began to experience intense pain, then bleeding. She called for help before fainting. When she regained consciousness she had lost her nearly full-term baby.

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Authorities charged Vasquez with aggravated murder and she was convicted in 2008.

In December, a court rejected her appeal of the sentence.

El Salvador is one of four Latin American countries with total bans on abortion.

The human rights group Amnesty International said Vasquez’s release “must open the door for an end to the country’s extreme anti-abortion law.”

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