Friday, March 16, 2018

Women In Argentina Treated Like Texas Women - Pedophile Israeli-Argentine Pope Francis Offers To Murder Them With Galil Rifles And Steal The Fetuses

Women In Argentina Treated Like Texas Women  - Pedophile  Israeli-Argentine  Pope Francis Offers To Murder Them With Galil Rifles And Steal The Fetuses


wolfblitzzer0: Argentina:Catholic Butchers of Pregnant Women,'Pope ...

wolfblitzzer0.blogspot.mx/2013/12/catholic-butchers-of-argentine-pregnant.html

Catholic Butchers of Argentine Pregnant Women,'Pope Francis'' AKA Jorge Mario Bergoglio ,U.S.Papal Pro Nunciate Pio Laghi And this scumbag ... In this capacity, Bergoglio was the highest ranking Jesuit inArgentina during the military dictatorship led by General Jorge Videla (1976-1983). He later became bishop and ...

wolfblitzzer0: Argentina.Pope Francis Jorge Mario Bergoglio,Papal ...

wolfblitzzer0.blogspot.kr/2015/06/argentinapope-francis-jorge-mario.html

hace 6 días - ... the present pope as well as Rome's Pro Nunciate Pio Laghi was soo ... Does theArgentine miliary's and Israel's friend Pope Francis who who ... 'Jewish women murdered by argentine military junta drugged atlantic',yourself. ... However, in Argentina the military leaders saw the Jewish minority and their .
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https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2018/mar/14/women-in-argentina-live-in-hell-calls-for-legal-abortion-grow

Women In Argentina live in hell': calls for legal abortion grow


Women's rights and gender equality

A groundswell of support for Argentinian women to be allowed terminations in the early weeks of pregnancy could soon culminate in a change the the law


When I tell people abroad that abortions are still illegal in Argentina, they say, ‘You must live in hell,’” says comedian Malena Pichot. “And yes, women in Argentina live in hell.”

The country has very restrictive abortion laws. Even when it is deemed lawful – in the case of rape, or when a woman’s life is in danger – doctors are often unwilling to proceed for fear of prosecution.


In neighbouring Uruguay, the only South American nation where abortion is legal in all circumstances, the mortality rate from performed abortions has dropped dramatically since the procedure was legalised in 2012. In the late 1990s nearly 30% of maternal deaths could be attributed to unsafe abortions. In the two years after abortion was decriminalised, there were only two abortion-linked maternal deaths, both of which were attributed to backstreet abortions.



Opposition from the Catholic church is no small matter given that Pope Francis is from Argentina. “The Pope is Argentinian but he now lives in Italy, where abortion has been legal for a long time,” says Donda. “Let’s hope he doesn’t get involved.
.........................................
http://politicalandsciencerhymes.blogspot.com/2015/06/rape-of-argentine-jewish-women-pope.html

Rape Of Argentine Jewish Women ,A Pope Francis Bergoglio,Israel Zionist Hoax?:No Evidence So Far Of Deaths Or Murder Of Argentine Jewish Women Or Military Rape Pregnancies


https://consortiumnews.com/2013/05/17/reagan-and-argentinas-dirty-war/

A human rights group, Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo, says as many as 500 babies were stolen by the military during the repression from 1976 to 1983.

General Videla was accused of permitting – and concealing – the scheme to harvest infants from pregnant women who were kept alive in military prisons only long enough to give birth. According to the charges, the babies were taken from the new mothers, sometimes after late-night Caesarean sections, and then distributed to military families or sent to orphanages.
After the babies were pulled away, the mothers were removed to another site for their executions. Some were put aboard death flights and pushed out of military planes over open water.
One of the most notorious cases involved Silvia Quintela, a leftist doctor who attended to the sick in shanty towns around Buenos Aires. On Jan. 17, 1977, Quintela was abducted off a Buenos Aires street by military authorities because of her political leanings. At the time, Quintela and her agronomist husband Abel Madariaga were expecting their first child.
According to witnesses who later testified before a government truth commission, Quintela was held at a military base called Campo de Mayo, where she gave birth to a baby boy. As in similar cases, the infant then was separated from the mother.
What happened to the boy is still not clear, but Quintela reportedly was transferred to a nearby airfield. There, victims were stripped naked, shackled in groups and dragged aboard military planes. The planes then flew out over the Rio de la Plata or the Atlantic Ocean, where soldiers pushed the victims out of the planes and into the water to drown......


Pope Francis: questions remain over his role during Argentina's ...

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/mar/.../pope-francis-argentina-military-junt...

Mar 13, 2013 - Jorge Bergoglio was head of the Jesuit order in the 1970s when the church backedmilitary government and called for patriotism.


Israel's Latin American trail of terror | News | Al Jazeera


https://www.aljazeera.com/archive/2003/06/2008491463219614.html


Jun 5, 2003 - Amazingly, while the Israelis were training the El Salvadoran death squads they were also supporting the  Argentine military government of the late ... The Israelis supplied Guatemala with Galil rifles, and built an ammunition factory for them, as well as supplying armoured personnel carriers and .






https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2018/mar/14/women-in-argentina-live-in-hell-calls-for-legal-abortion-grow

Women In Argentina live in hell': calls for legal abortion grow
Global development

Women's rights and gender equality

A groundswell of support for Argentinian women to be allowed terminations in the early weeks of pregnancy could soon culminate in a change the the law

Photograph: Marcos Brindicci/Reuters
When I tell people abroad that abortions are still illegal in Argentina, they say, ‘You must live in hell,’” says comedian Malena Pichot. “And yes, women in Argentina live in hell.”

The country has very restrictive abortion laws. Even when it is deemed lawful – in the case of rape, or when a woman’s life is in danger – doctors are often unwilling to proceed for fear of prosecution.

Argentine stand-up comedian Malena Pichot
Argentine standup comedian Malena Pichot. Photograph: Courtesy Malena Pichot
But a shift in public opinion in this traditionally conservative country has forced congress to vote on a bill to change the law later this month. The amendment would allow terminations in the first 14 weeks of pregnancy.

“At last! Legal abortion is at the top of the feminist agenda,” says Señorita Bimbo, another comedian, whose treatment of abortion during her standup routines and on TV has helped propel the discussion about the subject into the mainstream media.

Bimbo, whose real name is María Virginia Godoy, says calls for abortion liberalisation are being driven by young women, who comprise the largest section of her audience. “These young women have clear knowledge of the issue, they don’t need it explained. They are not ashamed to be identified as feminists either, or of taking a stance on social media.”


Argentinian comedian María Virginia Godoy aka Señorita Bimbo
Argentinian comedian María Virginia Godoy, AKA Señorita Bimbo. Photograph: Courtesy Maria Virginia Godoy
This growing demand for legal changes has even prompted Mauricio Macri, Argentina’s centre-right president – who has repeatedly declared himself pro-life – to change his tune.

Last week, he said that if congress votes to relax abortion laws on 20 March, he would not veto the decision.

Argentina’s minister of culture, Pablo Avelluto, has already signed an open letter in which 86 leading Argentinian intellectuals declare their support for decriminalisation.

“There’s more people talking about abortion than ever before,” says Pichot, who rose to fame as a YouTube star 10 years ago. “It’s impressive, because for many years there were very few like me or Señorita Bimbo willing to talk openly about it.”


Argentine human rights activist and legislator Victoria Donda Pérez at the women’s march on 9 March 2018.
Argentinian human rights activist and legislator Victoria Donda at the women’s march in Buenos Aires. Photograph: Courtesy Victoria Donda
A massive International Women’s Day march paralysed traffic in the Argentinian capital on 8 March, as tens of thousands of women gathered before the congress building in Buenos Aires. A large number wore green bandanas around their necks – the symbol of support for decriminalisation.

Pro-choice supporters have steadily risen in number since 2015, when protests began against gender violence in Argentina, which is estimated to claim the life of one woman every 30 hours.



Rallying around the Ni una menos motto (“Not one less”, meaning no more women should be lost to male violence), the protests have become impossible for politicians to ignore.



“Many women who didn’t consider themselves feminists joined the #NiUnaMenos rallies and realised that the ban on abortion, which results in so many deaths of young women undergoing illegal abortions, is also a major issue,” says Pichot.

“[Roughly] 500,000 clandestine abortions are performed every year in Argentina,” says Victoria Donda, a leftwing legislator who is one of the main advocates for decriminalisation. “There are young women who go to jail for having undergone the procedure. This can’t go on.”

Complications related to clandestine abortions are the main cause of death among pregnant women in 17 out of 24 of Argentine provinces, according to Amnesty International.

Pichot and Señorita Bimbo are approached continually by women seeking advice on abortion. “They are very alone and come to us because we’re among the very few people talking about abortion publicly and frequently,” says Bimbo. “There’s so many women undergoing clandestine procedures. It’s happening all the time – it’s insane.”

'Global gag rule' could have dire impact in Latin America, activists warn


In neighbouring Uruguay, the only South American nation where abortion is legal in all circumstances, the mortality rate from performed abortions has dropped dramatically since the procedure was legalised in 2012. In the late 1990s nearly 30% of maternal deaths could be attributed to unsafe abortions. In the two years after abortion was decriminalised, there were only two abortion-linked maternal deaths, both of which were attributed to backstreet abortions.



Opposition from the Catholic church is no small matter given that Pope Francis is from Argentina. “The Pope is Argentinian but he now lives in Italy, where abortion has been legal for a long time,” says Donda. “Let’s hope he doesn’t get involved.”


Women wear knickers as masks during a Photograph: Marcos Brindicci/Reuters
When I tell people abroad that abortions are still illegal in Argentina, they say, ‘You must live in hell,’” says comedian Malena Pichot. “And yes, women in Argentina live in hell.”

The country has very restrictive abortion laws. Even when it is deemed lawful – in the case of rape, or when a woman’s life is in danger – doctors are often unwilling to proceed for fear of prosecution.

Argentine stand-up comedian Malena Pichot
Argentine standup comedian Malena Pichot. Photograph: Courtesy Malena Pichot

But a shift in public opinion in this traditionally conservative country has forced congress to vote on a bill to change the law later this month. The amendment would allow terminations in the first 14 weeks of pregnancy.

“At last! Legal abortion is at the top of the feminist agenda,” says Señorita Bimbo, another comedian, whose treatment of abortion during her standup routines and on TV has helped propel the discussion about the subject into the mainstream media.

Bimbo, whose real name is María Virginia Godoy, says calls for abortion liberalisation are being driven by young women, who comprise the largest section of her audience. “These young women have clear knowledge of the issue, they don’t need it explained. They are not ashamed to be identified as feminists either, or of taking a stance on social media.”

Argentinian comedian María Virginia Godoy aka Señorita Bimbo
Argentinian comedian María Virginia Godoy, AKA Señorita Bimbo. Photograph: Courtesy Maria Virginia Godoy
This growing demand for legal changes has even prompted Mauricio Macri, Argentina’s centre-right president – who has repeatedly declared himself pro-life – to change his tune.

Last week, he said that if congress votes to relax abortion laws on 20 March, he would not veto the decision.

Argentina’s minister of culture, Pablo Avelluto, has already signed an open letter in which 86 leading Argentinian intellectuals declare their support for decriminalisation.

“There’s more people talking about abortion than ever before,” says Pichot, who rose to fame as a YouTube star 10 years ago. “It’s impressive, because for many years there were very few like me or Señorita Bimbo willing to talk openly about it.”

Argentine human rights activist and legislator Victoria Donda Pérez at the women’s march on 9 March 2018.
Argentinian human rights activist and legislator Victoria Donda at the women’s march in Buenos Aires. Photograph: Courtesy Victoria Donda
A massive International Women’s Day march paralysed traffic in the Argentinian capital on 8 March, as tens of thousands of women gathered before the congress building in Buenos Aires. A large number wore green bandanas around their necks – the symbol of support for decriminalisation.

Pro-choice supporters have steadily risen in number since 2015, when protests began against gender violence in Argentina, which is estimated to claim the life of one woman every 30 hours.

Rallying around the Ni una menos motto (“Not one less”, meaning no more women should be lost to male violence), the protests have become impossible for politicians to ignore.

“Many women who didn’t consider themselves feminists joined the #NiUnaMenos rallies and realised that the ban on abortion, which results in so many deaths of young women undergoing illegal abortions, is also a major issue,” says Pichot.

“[Roughly] 500,000 clandestine abortions are performed every year in Argentina,” says Victoria Donda, a leftwing legislator who is one of the main advocates for decriminalisation. “There are young women who go to jail for having undergone the procedure. This can’t go on.”

Complications related to clandestine abortions are the main cause of death among pregnant women in 17 out of 24 of Argentine provinces, according to Amnesty International.

Pichot and Señorita Bimbo are approached continually by women seeking advice on abortion. “They are very alone and come to us because we’re among the very few people talking about abortion publicly and frequently,” says Bimbo. “There’s so many women undergoing clandestine procedures. It’s happening all the time – it’s insane.”

'Global gag rule' could have dire impact in Latin America, activists warn


In neighbouring Uruguay, the only South American nation where abortion is legal in all circumstances, the mortality rate from performed abortions has dropped dramatically since the procedure was legalised in 2012. In the late 1990s nearly 30% of maternal deaths could be attributed to unsafe abortions. In the two years after abortion was decriminalised, there were only two abortion-linked maternal deaths, both of which were attributed to backstreet abortions.




Opposition from the Catholic church is no small matter given that Pope Francis is from Argentina. “The Pope is Argentinian but he now lives in Italy, where abortion has been legal for a long time,” says Donda. “Let’s hope he doesn’t get involved.”

..................................................



.........................................
http://politicalandsciencerhymes.blogspot.com/2015/06/rape-of-argentine-jewish-women-pope.html


Rape Of Argentine Jewish Women ,A Pope Francis Bergoglio,Israel Zionist Hoax?:No Evidence So Far Of Deaths Or Murder Of Argentine Jewish Women Or Military Rape Pregnancies


https://consortiumnews.com/2013/05/17/reagan-and-argentinas-dirty-war/

A human rights group, Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo, says as many as 500 babies were stolen by the military during the repression from 1976 to 1983.

General Videla was accused of permitting – and concealing – the scheme to harvest infants from pregnant women who were kept alive in military prisons only long enough to give birth. According to the charges, the babies were taken from the new mothers, sometimes after late-night Caesarean sections, and then distributed to military families or sent to orphanages.
After the babies were pulled away, the mothers were removed to another site for their executions. Some were put aboard death flights and pushed out of military planes over open water.
One of the most notorious cases involved Silvia Quintela, a leftist doctor who attended to the sick in shanty towns around Buenos Aires. On Jan. 17, 1977, Quintela was abducted off a Buenos Aires street by military authorities because of her political leanings. At the time, Quintela and her agronomist husband Abel Madariaga were expecting their first child.
According to witnesses who later testified before a government truth commission, Quintela was held at a military base called Campo de Mayo, where she gave birth to a baby boy. As in similar cases, the infant then was separated from the mother.
What happened to the boy is still not clear, but Quintela reportedly was transferred to a nearby airfield. There, victims were stripped naked, shackled in groups and dragged aboard military planes. The planes then flew out over the Rio de la Plata or the Atlantic Ocean, where soldiers pushed the victims out of the planes and into the water to drown......

Argentine church to hand over certificates of baptisms at torture center
Crux: Covering all things Catholic Mar 7, 2018

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina - Argentine’s Catholic leaders announced Tuesday that they will hand over to a judge more than 100 certificates from baptisms performed in a chapel at a navy base that served as a clandestine torture center during the country’s dictatorship.

Activists hope the information will help determine what happened to children taken from political prisoners at the center and later illegally adopted, often by military families. Human rights groups say most of the detained biological parents were later killed................

In total, 127 certificates from baptisms performed between 1975 and 1984 at the chapel in the Navy School of Mechanics will be given to federal judge Sergio Torres, who is handling cases related to the torture center. About 5,000 dissidents are believed to have been taken there and very few survived. The center had a clandestine maternity hospital..











'Women 

in Argentina live in hell': calls for legal abortion grow

A groundswell of support for Argentinian women to be allowed terminations in the early weeks of pregnancy could soon culminate in a change the the law


Photograph: Marcos Brindicci/Reuters

When I tell people abroad that abortions are still illegal in Argentina, they say, ‘You must live in hell,’” says comedian Malena Pichot. “And yes, women in Argentina live in hell.”
The country has very restrictive abortion laws. Even when it is deemed lawful – in the case of rape, or when a woman’s life is in danger – doctors are often unwilling to proceed for fear of prosecution.




Argentine stand-up comedian Malena Pichot
 Argentine standup comedian Malena Pichot. Photograph: Courtesy Malena Pichot

But a shift in public opinion in this traditionally conservative country has forced congress to vote on a bill to change the law later this month. The amendment would allow terminations in the first 14 weeks of pregnancy.
“At last! Legal abortion is at the top of the feminist agenda,” says Señorita Bimbo, another comedian, whose treatment of abortion during her standup routines and on TV has helped propel the discussion about the subject into the mainstream media.
Bimbo, whose real name is María Virginia Godoy, says calls for abortion liberalisation are being driven by young women, who comprise the largest section of her audience. “These young women have clear knowledge of the issue, they don’t need it explained. They are not ashamed to be identified as feminists either, or of taking a stance on social media.”




Argentinian comedian María Virginia Godoy aka Señorita Bimbo
 Argentinian comedian María Virginia Godoy, AKA Señorita Bimbo. Photograph: Courtesy Maria Virginia Godoy

This growing demand for legal changes has even prompted Mauricio Macri, Argentina’s centre-right president – who has repeatedly declared himself pro-life – to change his tune.
Last week, he said that if congress votes to relax abortion laws on 20 March, he would not veto the decision.
Argentina’s minister of culture, Pablo Avelluto, has already signed an open letter in which 86 leading Argentinian intellectuals declare their support for decriminalisation.
“There’s more people talking about abortion than ever before,” says Pichot, who rose to fame as a YouTube star 10 years ago. “It’s impressive, because for many years there were very few like me or Señorita Bimbo willing to talk openly about it.”




Argentine human rights activist and legislator Victoria Donda Pérez at the women’s march on 9 March 2018.
 Argentinian human rights activist and legislator Victoria Donda at the women’s march in Buenos Aires. Photograph: Courtesy Victoria Donda

A massive International Women’s Day march paralysed traffic in the Argentinian capital on 8 March, as tens of thousands of women gathered before the congress building in Buenos Aires. A large number wore green bandanas around their necks – the symbol of support for decriminalisation.
Pro-choice supporters have steadily risen in number since 2015, when protests began against gender violence in Argentina, which is estimated to claim the life of one woman every 30 hours.

Rallying around the Ni una menos motto (“Not one less”, meaning no more women should be lost to male violence), the protests have become impossible for politicians to ignore.

“Many women who didn’t consider themselves feminists joined the #NiUnaMenos rallies and realised that the ban on abortion, which results in so many deaths of young women undergoing illegal abortions, is also a major issue,” says Pichot.
“[Roughly] 500,000 clandestine abortions are performed every year in Argentina,” says Victoria Donda, a leftwing legislator who is one of the main advocates for decriminalisation. “There are young women who go to jail for having undergone the procedure. This can’t go on.”
Complications related to clandestine abortions are the main cause of death among pregnant women in 17 out of 24 of Argentine provinces, according to Amnesty International.
Pichot and Señorita Bimbo are approached continually by women seeking advice on abortion. “They are very alone and come to us because we’re among the very few people talking about abortion publicly and frequently,” says Bimbo. “There’s so many women undergoing clandestine procedures. It’s happening all the time – it’s insane.”





In neighbouring Uruguay, the only South American nation where abortion is legal in all circumstances, the mortality rate from performed abortions has dropped dramatically since the procedure was legalised in 2012. In the late 1990s nearly 30% of maternal deaths could be attributed to unsafe abortions. In the two years after abortion was decriminalised, there were only two abortion-linked maternal deaths, both of which were attributed to backstreet abortions.

Opposition from the Catholic church is no small matter given that Pope Francis is from Argentina. “The Pope is Argentinian but he now lives in Italy, where abortion has been legal for a long time,” says Donda. “Let’s hope he doesn’t get involved.”



Pintere

 Women wear knickers as masks during a Photograph: Marcos Brindicci/Reuters

When I tell people abroad that abortions are still illegal in Argentina, they say, ‘You must live in hell,’” says comedian Malena Pichot. “And yes, women in Argentina live in hell.”
The country has very restrictive abortion laws. Even when it is deemed lawful – in the case of rape, or when a woman’s life is in danger – doctors are often unwilling to proceed for fear of prosecution.





Argentine stand-up comedian Malena Pichot
 Argentine standup comedian Malena Pichot. Photograph: Courtesy Malena Pichot

But a shift in public opinion in this traditionally conservative country has forced congress to vote on a bill to change the law later this month. The amendment would allow terminations in the first 14 weeks of pregnancy.
“At last! Legal abortion is at the top of the feminist agenda,” says Señorita Bimbo, another comedian, whose treatment of abortion during her standup routines and on TV has helped propel the discussion about the subject into the mainstream media.
Bimbo, whose real name is María Virginia Godoy, says calls for abortion liberalisation are being driven by young women, who comprise the largest section of her audience. “These young women have clear knowledge of the issue, they don’t need it explained. They are not ashamed to be identified as feminists either, or of taking a stance on social media.”





Argentinian comedian María Virginia Godoy aka Señorita Bimbo
 Argentinian comedian María Virginia Godoy, AKA Señorita Bimbo. Photograph: Courtesy Maria Virginia Godoy

This growing demand for legal changes has even prompted Mauricio Macri, Argentina’s centre-right president – who has repeatedly declared himself pro-life – to change his tune.
Last week, he said that if congress votes to relax abortion laws on 20 March, he would not veto the decision.
Argentina’s minister of culture, Pablo Avelluto, has already signed an open letter in which 86 leading Argentinian intellectuals declare their support for decriminalisation.
“There’s more people talking about abortion than ever before,” says Pichot, who rose to fame as a YouTube star 10 years ago. “It’s impressive, because for many years there were very few like me or Señorita Bimbo willing to talk openly about it.”





Argentine human rights activist and legislator Victoria Donda Pérez at the women’s march on 9 March 2018.
 Argentinian human rights activist and legislator Victoria Donda at the women’s march in Buenos Aires. Photograph: Courtesy Victoria Donda

A massive International Women’s Day march paralysed traffic in the Argentinian capital on 8 March, as tens of thousands of women gathered before the congress building in Buenos Aires. A large number wore green bandanas around their necks – the symbol of support for decriminalisation.
Pro-choice supporters have steadily risen in number since 2015, when protests began against gender violence in Argentina, which is estimated to claim the life of one woman every 30 hours.

Rallying around the Ni una menos motto (“Not one less”, meaning no more women should be lost to male violence), the protests have become impossible for politicians to ignore.

“Many women who didn’t consider themselves feminists joined the #NiUnaMenos rallies and realised that the ban on abortion, which results in so many deaths of young women undergoing illegal abortions, is also a major issue,” says Pichot.
“[Roughly] 500,000 clandestine abortions are performed every year in Argentina,” says Victoria Donda, a leftwing legislator who is one of the main advocates for decriminalisation. “There are young women who go to jail for having undergone the procedure. This can’t go on.”
Complications related to clandestine abortions are the main cause of death among pregnant women in 17 out of 24 of Argentine provinces, according to Amnesty International.
Pichot and Señorita Bimbo are approached continually by women seeking advice on abortion. “They are very alone and come to us because we’re among the very few people talking about abortion publicly and frequently,” says Bimbo. “There’s so many women undergoing clandestine procedures. It’s happening all the time – it’s insane.”






In neighbouring Uruguay, the only South American nation where abortion is legal in all circumstances, the mortality rate from performed abortions has dropped dramatically since the procedure was legalised in 2012. In the late 1990s nearly 30% of maternal deaths could be attributed to unsafe abortions. In the two years after abortion was decriminalised, there were only two abortion-linked maternal deaths, both of which were attributed to backstreet abortions.

Opposition from the Catholic church is no small matter given that Pope Francis is from Argentina. “The Pope is Argentinian but he now lives in Italy, where abortion has been legal for a long time,” says Donda. “Let’s hope he doesn’t get involved.”




Pintere


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