Activists' network in Mexico helps U.S. women get abortions

Books on abortion issues sit at the Marea Verde Chihuahua, an organization that supports reproductive rights, in Chihuahua, Mexico, Monday, March 13, 2023. To safely advise women on self-managed medical abortions, members of Marea Verde Chihuahua were trained to become 鈥渁compa帽antes鈥 -- capable of serving as a guide and partner, whether in person or from long distance. (AP Photo/Adriana Esquivel)

CHIHUAHUA, Mexico (AP) 鈥 Marcela Castro鈥檚 office in Chihuahua is more than 100 miles from the U.S.-Mexico border, yet the distance doesn鈥檛 prevent her from assisting women in the United States in circumventing recently imposed bans on abortion.

From the headquarters of Marea Verde Chihuahua, an organization that has supported reproductive rights in northern Mexico since 2018, Castro and her colleagues provide virtual guidance, as well as shipments of abortion pills for women who want to terminate a pregnancy on their own.

This abortion model, in which no travel, clinics or prescriptions are needed, sparked interest in the U.S. 鈥 and a surge of requests for help 鈥 as the Supreme Court moved to eliminate the constitutional right to abortion last year. But the model was developed by Mexican activists through decades of facing abortion bans and restrictions in most of Mexico鈥檚 32 states.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 offer medical attention because we are not doctors,鈥 Castro said. 鈥淧art of our work, though, is to remove the stigma toward abortion. Although it is a medical procedure, it does not require hospital measures.鈥

To safely advise women on self-managed medical abortions, Castro and her colleagues were trained to become 鈥渁compa帽antes鈥 -- capable of serving as a guide and partner, whether in person or from long distance. They have carefully studied national abortion guidelines and they know by heart some protocols established by the World Health Organization.

Since they do not charge for the help they provide, most 鈥渁compa帽antes鈥 need jobs outside the organizations where they volunteer. Among them are lawyers, psychologists and other professionals. Over the years, they have created a nationwide network that has secured abortion access for Mexican and foreign women, whether or not abortion is legal where they live.

鈥淲e are ordinary women working for reproductive justice,鈥 Castro said. 鈥淲e seek what the State has denied us out of prohibition.鈥

Mexican women face a scenario that resembles the U.S., where more than a dozen states 鈥 including Texas -- have imposed sweeping abortion bans. Unless it鈥檚 justified under certain exceptions, abortion is considered a crime in two-thirds of Mexico鈥檚 states.

Chihuahua, where Castro lives, is ruled by a conservative governor and its penal code criminalizes most abortions.

Among all other Mexican border states where 鈥渁compa帽antes鈥 support Mexican or American women, abortion is only legal in Baja California. Additionally, a 2021 ruling by Mexico鈥檚 Supreme Court held that those who get the procedure shouldn鈥檛 be punished in Coahuila, a state south of Texas.

More than 30 women collaborate with Castro in Marea Verde Chihuahua. They are part of what she calls a binational network, bringing together several Mexican collectives willing to facilitate self-managed abortions in the U.S.

Most women from the U.S. contact Marea Verde Chihuahua through social media or by someone鈥檚 referral. Most communicate in Spanish, though the acompa帽antes are able to assist English speakers as well.

After an initial contact, members of the team check their availability and an 鈥渁compa帽ante鈥 is assigned to each case. Further communications usually proceed via WhatsApp.

The accompaniment starts with some basic questions to determine the gestational age, how the pregnancy was confirmed, and the woman鈥檚 overall health. Once the information is evaluated, the 鈥渁compa帽ante鈥 proposes how to proceed.

In most cases, medication is advised and the 鈥渁compa帽ante鈥 is able to provide a combination of two abortion pills, misoprostol and mifepristone, both considered safe by the World Health Organization and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Although both medications require a prescription in the U.S., misoprostol can be acquired without a prescription in Mexican pharmacies 鈥 though some vendors refuse to sell pills to women. Mifepristone can be obtained through some abortion rights organizations.

The work of the 鈥渁compa帽antes鈥 troubles anti-abortion activists in Mexico. One of them, Jahel Torres of a national group called Pasos por la Vida, suggested there were health risks because abortion pills were being distributed by non-medical personnel.

However, the WHO has depicted self-managed abortion as a safe option.

Castro and her colleagues usually send pills by mail and provide virtual follow-up until the abortion is completed. But depending on its personnel and resources, each Mexican abortion collective has its own logistics.

Aborto Seguro Chihuahua, which is part of the binational network, provides long-distance guidance to women in the U.S. but medication is not mailed from Mexico. Instead, the 鈥渁compa帽antes鈥 collaborate with volunteers who transport the pills from Ciudad Ju谩rez, in Chihuahua, to El Paso, Texas, where the packages are delivered either in person or through mailing services.

Laura Dorado works alongside 20 people in Aborto Seguro Chihuahua and says her team handles around 120 abortions per month. Some requests come from Mexico; others from Texas, Arizona and Colorado.

When she receives a message from a woman who is able to travel from the U.S. to Mexico, Dorado can offer some advice. 鈥淲e have identified some pharmacies in which buying the pills is not a struggle or we suggest staying at a hotel and request the medication by delivery, to keep a low profile.鈥

Dorado said Aborto Seguro Chihuahua mostly receives mifepristone pills from Las Libres, an organization founded 20 years ago in the conservative state of Guanajuato, in central Mexico, where abortion is still banned.

Led by activist Veronica Cruz, Las Libres pioneered in training 鈥渁compa帽antes鈥 to provide virtual guidance for self-managed medical abortions in Mexico and, since 2019, in the U.S. as well.

鈥淚n January 2022, we had an average of 10 cases every day. When Roe was overturned, in June, we had up to a hundred,鈥 Cruz said.

She said the numbers kept rising until they reached 300 requests per day, all from the U.S. The workload was immense for her team of 10 people, so she created new networks to help.

鈥淚n one year we have created more than 20 networks. We are about 200 people helping only the United States,鈥 Cruz said.

As with Marea Verde and Aborto Seguro in Chihuahua, Las Libres usually receives requests from Texas, Arizona and Colorado. Occasionally, women also reach out from Florida, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Georgia, California, New Jersey and New York.

Though abortion is legal in some of those states, 鈥渁compa帽antes鈥 believe many of these women are of Hispanic origin and either want to avoid going to an abortion clinic or can鈥檛 afford to pay up to $600 to get an abortion where they live.

According to Cruz, many of these women are wary of self-managed abortions, and fighting that stigma has become part of their work.

鈥淢ost people think pills aren鈥檛 safe, so changing all of that so quickly has been a challenge,鈥 Cruz said.

John Seago, president of Texas Right to Life, said there has yet to be any intensive effort to prosecute people involved in supplying abortion pills to Texas residents.

鈥淭exas simply does not have enough policy tools to efficiently stop these practices," Seago said. His organization is pushing for new legislation, he added 鈥渟o that those breaking Texas law by aiding and abetting abortion digitally or physically will be held accountable.鈥

Nathan Cortez, a professor at Southern Methodist University in Dallas specializing in health law, said he considered it inevitable that women in states with abortion bans would consider options outside the U.S.

鈥淭his demonstrates the limits of a state鈥檚 jurisdiction 鈥 the more onerous and unreasonable your state laws are, the more likely you are to push prohibited activities elsewhere.鈥 Cortez said.

鈥斺赌

Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP鈥檚 collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

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