Zürcher Nachrichten - Abortion film shows impact of Texas ban ahead of US election

EUR -
AED 3.821057
AFN 73.006821
ALL 98.512217
AMD 415.678797
ANG 1.873062
AOA 948.764769
ARS 1069.072052
AUD 1.649931
AWG 1.872562
AZN 1.770572
BAM 1.955447
BBD 2.098421
BDT 124.19758
BGN 1.956839
BHD 0.392129
BIF 3072.506989
BMD 1.040312
BND 1.411906
BOB 7.181704
BRL 6.505282
BSD 1.039312
BTN 88.499776
BWP 14.434394
BYN 3.401186
BYR 20390.119174
BZD 2.091322
CAD 1.49394
CDF 2985.696084
CHF 0.935655
CLF 0.037305
CLP 1029.367761
CNY 7.592096
CNH 7.600745
COP 4550.231947
CRC 527.704739
CUC 1.040312
CUP 27.568273
CVE 110.282725
CZK 25.128844
DJF 185.07659
DKK 7.463155
DOP 63.308572
DZD 140.574623
EGP 52.912125
ERN 15.604683
ETB 132.329112
FJD 2.41212
FKP 0.823909
GBP 0.828868
GEL 2.923205
GGP 0.823909
GHS 15.283044
GIP 0.823909
GMD 74.902906
GNF 8982.3785
GTQ 8.008518
GYD 217.440748
HKD 8.07922
HNL 26.406233
HRK 7.462062
HTG 135.862824
HUF 411.523555
IDR 16866.581743
ILS 3.79457
IMP 0.823909
INR 88.831167
IQD 1361.45423
IRR 43784.131855
ISK 145.175469
JEP 0.823909
JMD 161.930768
JOD 0.737895
JPY 163.687937
KES 134.324804
KGS 90.506913
KHR 4176.242501
KMF 484.915563
KPW 936.280401
KRW 1516.624314
KWD 0.320604
KYD 0.866144
KZT 538.412806
LAK 22728.896977
LBP 93069.29912
LKR 306.304706
LRD 189.22587
LSL 19.325111
LTL 3.071771
LVL 0.629274
LYD 5.102079
MAD 10.480808
MDL 19.175538
MGA 4902.11507
MKD 61.518895
MMK 3378.893454
MNT 3534.98073
MOP 8.314299
MRU 41.48851
MUR 48.96761
MVR 16.02902
MWK 1802.174671
MXN 20.97774
MYR 4.667854
MZN 66.479829
NAD 19.325111
NGN 1603.786908
NIO 38.243096
NOK 11.804528
NPR 141.547448
NZD 1.842566
OMR 0.400258
PAB 1.039312
PEN 3.870101
PGK 4.218239
PHP 60.909762
PKR 289.341068
PLN 4.260908
PYG 8105.536788
QAR 3.781353
RON 4.977166
RSD 116.947785
RUB 103.957734
RWF 1449.838275
SAR 3.906518
SBD 8.721515
SCR 14.841021
SDG 625.744421
SEK 11.551938
SGD 1.413264
SHP 0.823909
SLE 23.721347
SLL 21814.829886
SOS 593.992772
SRD 36.471239
STD 21532.362215
SVC 9.094358
SYP 2613.815872
SZL 19.33351
THB 35.547799
TJS 11.374265
TMT 3.651496
TND 3.31516
TOP 2.436519
TRY 36.73036
TTD 7.062725
TWD 34.010202
TZS 2517.555813
UAH 43.577933
UGX 3804.313245
USD 1.040312
UYU 46.277438
UZS 13417.577857
VES 53.654247
VND 26444.736193
VUV 123.507948
WST 2.874162
XAF 655.838608
XAG 0.035157
XAU 0.000398
XCD 2.811496
XDR 0.796856
XOF 655.838608
XPF 119.331742
YER 260.468147
ZAR 19.379149
ZMK 9364.060487
ZMW 28.762808
ZWL 334.980105
  • RELX

    0.3000

    45.89

    +0.65%

  • GSK

    -0.0300

    34.03

    -0.09%

  • AZN

    -0.3300

    66.3

    -0.5%

  • BTI

    0.0400

    36.26

    +0.11%

  • BP

    0.0400

    28.79

    +0.14%

  • NGG

    -0.1600

    58.86

    -0.27%

  • SCS

    0.0800

    11.73

    +0.68%

  • RIO

    -0.0300

    59.2

    -0.05%

  • RBGPF

    59.8000

    59.8

    +100%

  • CMSC

    -0.1321

    23.77

    -0.56%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    8.43

    +0.71%

  • BCC

    0.9500

    123.19

    +0.77%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    22.9

    +0.26%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    7.24

    -0.14%

  • CMSD

    0.1000

    23.65

    +0.42%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.15

    +0.41%

Abortion film shows impact of Texas ban ahead of US election
Abortion film shows impact of Texas ban ahead of US election / Photo: Michael Tran - AFP

Abortion film shows impact of Texas ban ahead of US election

A harrowing new documentary about three Texas women who suffered unspeakable tragedy after they were refused abortions hits theaters Friday, as the battle over reproductive rights looms large ahead of the US election.

Text size:

"Zurawski v. Texas" follows Amanda Zurawski, Samantha Casiano and Austin Dennard through hospitals, courtrooms and funerals, in the months after the US Supreme Court -- filled with judges appointed by Donald Trump -- ended federal protections for abortion access.

All three women learned early that their pregnancies were not viable because of severe and uncurable medical problems, but were turned away by doctors who were too afraid to intervene due to the state's highly punitive new laws.

Zurawski went into septic shock after her cervix dilated at just 18 weeks. She spent days fighting for her life in intensive care; damage to her uterus means she is unlikely to be able to get pregnant again.

Casiano was forced to bring her pregnancy to term, despite learning about her fetus's fatal condition at 20 weeks. She watched her newborn daughter gasp for breath for four hours before she died.

Dennard, herself an obstetrician-gynecologist, had to travel to another state for her own abortion, when she learned that the fetus she was carrying was missing parts of its brain and skull, and could not survive.

The women agreed to let cameras follow them as they mounted legal challenges. The film is produced by Oscar winner Jennifer Lawrence, and former secretary of state Hillary Clinton.

"Watching what was happening in Texas was devastating," the film's co-director Abbie Perrault told AFP.

"We were just so incredibly moved that through all of the pain that they were experiencing, they were willing to put their faces and names out in public, and really stand up and try to make a change in Texas."

- Abortion on the ballot -

Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris will visit Houston for a rally on Friday, where she is expected to slam Texas's ultra-strict abortion laws.

The visit to a state her party cannot win just 11 days before the election underlines the national significance of reproductive rights in the race for the White House.

Democrats are keen to highlight Republican-sponsored laws banning abortions as soon as a heartbeat is detected, like in Texas, that they believe are deeply unpopular nationwide, and have especially shocked many women.

Zurawski's case has become particularly well-known. She was the named plaintiff of a high-profile class-action suit against Texas, and her plight was name-checked during last month's vice presidential debate.

"If you don't know an Amanda... you soon will," Harris's running mate Tim Walz said, warning of the spread of abortion bans if the Republicans prevail.

Among the documentary's most startling scenes are court hearings in which the women are relentlessly badgered by off-screen state attorneys, even as they sob through recounting their traumas.

In one scene, Casiano has to pause her testimony to be physically sick at the witness stand.

In another, the film shows the body of the daughter who lived for just four dreadful hours.

Casiano "felt very strongly that people needed to see her daughter's face, and understand that her daughter is a real person that suffered under these laws," said Perrault.

- 'Eerie' -

Along with the three women, "Zurawski v Texas" focuses on Molly Duane, a dogged attorney at the Center for Reproductive Rights, who took up their cases.

But their legal progress has been limited. Any victories have been swiftly reversed by the Texas Supreme Court.

State attorneys pin blame on hospitals, asking why plaintiffs did not simply sue their doctors.

But while Texas does technically have limited medical exemptions for abortions, Duane argues that these are so unclear that doctors are justifiably too terrified to operate.

The Texas Medical Board, when asked to clarify the exemptions, denies responsibility, or maintains an "eerie" silence, Duane says in the film.

Perrault and co-director Maisie Crow hope the film can help Americans "to understand more deeply what the laws that are in place are doing" before they cast their votes.

"People wanted to act like these women's stories weren't happening," she said.

"It's maybe convenient to believe they weren't."

M.Hug--NZN