Birth control in Argentina is difficult to obtain despite a 2002 law ensuring access to it, and doctors shy away from offering legal abortions in the predominantly Roman Catholic country, the report said. Argentine law strictly limits abortions, with exceptions that include physical or mental risk to the patient and pregnancies resulting from rape. Researchers from Human Rights Watch have found that, in practice, women in Argentina have encountered barriers to making independent decisions about reproduction, obstacles that include lack of information, domestic and sexual violence, and economic restraints that the government had not adequately addressed. The group also found that public officials were not being penalized for failing to uphold the laws on the books.
@96HXWM92yrs2Y
No, but the government should ban contraception and promote strong abstinence programs.
@95QC2522yrs2Y
No, but promote abstinence programs for 25 years.
@95DFSVN2yrs2Y
No, and ban contraception also promote abstinence.
@945BT4D2yrs2Y
No, this should be left for the individual to get not the government
@8Y59NZS2yrs2Y
Yes, the government should ensure that all women, 18+, have access to contraception if they don't wish to have a child in the next year, however, it should left to the parents of girls under 18
@8Y5452J2yrs2Y
Yes, the government should ensure that all women, 18+, have access to contraception if they aren't planning on having a child in the next year
@ISIDEWITH7yrs7Y