A ten-year old rape victim who was denied an abortion has given birth in northern India.
The
10-year old delivered a baby girl via Caesarian section at the
Government Medical College and Hospital in Chandigarh, a city in North
India.
Both the girl and her baby are in stable condition, according to Dasari Harish, one of the doctors caring for the girl.
The
girl was forced to have the baby after India's Supreme Court rejected
the family's plea for an abortion three weeks ago, based on the opinions
of eight doctors and an examination of the girl.
Her
doctor told CNN the girl didn't know she was pregnant. Her parents told
her that she needed surgery for a kidney stone problem, and refused to
allow medical professionals to tell their child the truth, according to Harish.
Under India's Medical
Termination of Pregnancy Act, the country doesn't allow abortion after
more than 20 weeks of pregnancy, unless they receive permission from the
courts.
The family, did
not approach the authorities about the girl's pregnancy until the 26th
or 27th week, said Alakh Alok Srivastava, a lawyer who represented the
girl's family, to CNN in a previous interview.
"[The]
first verdict the Supreme Court made was that the pregnancy cannot be
terminated at this stage based on the opinions of the medical board,"
Srivastava said.
As is the case with the vast majority of reported rapes in India, the rapist was known to the victim.
In this particular case, it was the girl's uncle, who had allegedly
raped her over a period of six to seven months. A case against the man
is pending.
Indira
Jaising, a senior lawyer for India's Supreme Court and a leading voice
on sexual assault and domestic violence, told CNN in July that the case
was indicative of the types of problems faced by people who belong to
the "poorest section of the society and the remotest part of India."
"It
is a class issue, it is an issue of access to medical services," she
said. "It is an issue of access to proper information about how to deal
with this situation. It is alarming that a medical professional did not
attend to this much earlier."
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