
-
Trump, Colombia leader trade threats as US strikes boats in Pacific
-
Flush with cash, US immigration agency expands weaponry and surveillance
-
Meta to cut 600 jobs in artificial intelligence: reports
-
Frustrated federal employees line up for food as US shutdown wears on
-
California to deploy national guard to help food banks
-
Colombian ambassador to US tells AFP Trump threats 'unacceptable'
-
Trump slaps 'tremendous' sanctions on Russian oil for Ukraine war
-
Trump, Colombia leader trade threats as US strikes boat in Pacific
-
Trump slaps 'trememdous' sanctions on Russian oil for Ukraine war
-
Lakers feel lack of LeBron in NBA season-opening loss
-
Charles to be first UK king to pray with pope in 500 years
-
Liverpool back on track while Real, Bayern and Chelsea win in Champions League
-
Chelsea teenagers shine in rout of 10-man Ajax
-
Global stocks mostly fall on lackluster results from Netflix, others
-
Liverpool end losing streak with thumping win at Eintracht Frankfurt
-
Tesla profits tumble on higher costs, tariff drag
-
US troops train in Panama jungle, as tensions simmer with Venezuela
-
Chelsea hit 10-man Ajax for five
-
Bellingham strike helps Real Madrid edge Juventus
-
US, EU pledge new sanctions on Russia for Ukraine war
-
Rubio due in Israel as US tries to shore up Gaza ceasefire
-
To make ends meet, Argentines sell their possessions
-
Morocco's Under-20 World Cup winners welcomed home by large crowds
-
NFL chief Goodell shrugs off Bad Bunny Super Bowl critics
-
Ohtani, Dodgers chase repeat in Blue Jays World Series showdown
-
US says two dead in strike on alleged drug-smuggling boat in Pacific
-
Lizzo sued over Sydney Sweeney jeans reference track
-
Dyche demands substance over style to get Forest going
-
NATO chief brushes off concerns of Trump-Zelensky rift
-
Some deceased see the light before Mexico's Day of the Dead
-
Car giant VW warns of production hit from Nexperia chips row
-
US defends truce and vows to disarm Hamas
-
Louvre director admits 'insufficient' camera coverage after heist
-
UK sanctions Balkans gangs as irregular migrant numbers rise
-
Global trade system risks coming off the rails: UN chief
-
UN court says Israel must ease aid into Gaza, provide 'basic needs'
-
Air safety in focus as US government shutdown hits fourth week
-
Zelensky seeks 150 Swedish fighter jets as Russia pummels Ukraine
-
Grandchildren of last woman executed in UK seek her pardon
-
Top UN court: Israel must ease aid into Gaza, provide 'basic needs'
-
Scrapped by Trump, revived US climate-disaster database reveals record losses
-
Overshooting 1.5C climate target 'inevitable': UN chief
-
South Africa sniff series-levelling win after Pakistan slump in 2nd Test
-
Gold, stocks slide on economic jitters
-
SpaceX cuts off 2,500 Starlink devices at Myanmar scam centres
-
Lithuanian defence minister resigns in military spending dispute
-
South Africa sniff series-levelling win after Pakistan slump in second Test
-
Ex-England centre Tuilagi extends Bayonne deal
-
La Liga chief laments Miami match collapse as others celebrate
-
SpaceX says 'disabled' 2,500 Starlink devices at Myanmar scam centres

'Too many children' as women denied abortion in Venezuela
Maria drank a concoction of ground avocado seed, "bad mother" and other plants to try and terminate her pregnancy in Venezuela, where abortion is illegal. It did not work.
Only people with money can access illegal, private abortions in the country, and Maria is not one of them.
Aged just 26, she lives with two of her five children in extreme poverty in Caracas in a house shared with other people.
The child she tried to abort is now three years old. She had another since then, 10 months ago.
"One wastes one's life giving birth, giving birth, giving birth," said Maria, who asked to use a pseudonym for the story.
Abortion is punishable by up to six years in jail in the fervently Catholic and conservative country. Using contraception, meanwhile, is widely viewed as sinful.
The procedure may be performed legally to save the life of the woman, and penalties can be reduced under Venezuelan law if a termination was intended to save the "honor" of the woman or her family.
"I didn't want to have more children. I had too many children too quickly," Maria said of her failed abortion attempt.
"I tried to get it (the fetus) out... but it didn't work," she told AFP.
The recipe of avocado seed and spider plant -- called "mala madre" or "bad mother" in Venezuela -- was given to her by a friend who had used it successfully before.
To get a professional, albeit illegal, abortion from a private doctor in Venezuela can cost as much as $1,000.
- 'Not a priority' -
Almost half of all pregnancies in the world are unplanned, of which about 60 percent end in abortion -- 45 percent of them unsafe, according to the World Health Organization.
Venezuela has no official statistics on terminations, but the country of nearly 30 million people is far from riding the pro-abortion "green tide" that has swept over Latin America in recent years.
In Argentina, Colombia, Cuba, Mexico and Uruguay the practice is legal. But it has never been a political priority in Venezuela's 24 years of successive leftist, populist, socially conservative, "Chavista" governments.
Parliament in 2021 promised new abortion legislation, but nothing has been announced to date.
"It is not a priority (in Venezuela) that women are dying from unsafe abortions," said Belmar Franceschi, executive director of the NGO Plafam which provides sexual and reproductive guidance.
In 2021, a teacher was arrested for helping a 13-year-old girl get an abortion after she was raped. The girl's assailant was never arrested, but the teacher spent nine months in custody.
In May this year, police dismantled a feminist activist group that authorities described as "a gang dedicated to promoting illegal abortion."
Many activists have ceased their activities since then, and a number of privately run hotlines have disappeared.
While demonstrations calling for safe, legal abortion in Venezuela have multiplied in recent years, the anti-abortion movement has grown as well.
A recent march against abortion organized by Evangelicals gathered hundreds of people in Caracas.
- 'No scolding' -
Zarina, a 35-year-old musician who declined to give her real name so as "not to go to jail," became pregnant despite being on birth control.
She wanted an abortion, but did not know how to get one.
After being shown away by a clinic, she bought pills which she collected in a dangerous slum area, in secret. They didn't work.
Her despair grew as the weeks passed and doctor after doctor turned her away for not having the money -- between $400 and $1,000 to be paid upfront.
Finally she found a gynecologist who performed the procedure and charged her $500, paid in installments.
"I felt safe," Zarina told AFP of the treatment she is grateful to have finally received.
"Respect, human warmth, no pain, no psycho terror, no scolding" -- a luxury very few in Venezuela have access to.
Th.Berger--AMWN