Hundreds Rally at US Supreme Court Against Abortion Bans in Eight States

Many of the restrictions are intended to draw legal challenges, which religious conservatives hope will lead the nation’s top court to overturn the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that established a woman’s right to terminate her pregnancy.

Washington: Abortion-rights campaigners, including Democrats seeking their party’s 2020 presidential nomination, rallied at the US Supreme Court on Tuesday to protest new restrictions on abortion passed by Republican-dominated legislatures in eight states.

Many of the restrictions are intended to draw legal challenges, which religious conservatives hope will lead the nation’s top court to overturn the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that established a woman’s right to terminate her pregnancy.

“We are not going to allow them to move our country backward,” US Senator Amy Klobuchar, one of the two dozen Democrats running for president, told the crowd through a megaphone.

Another candidate, Senator Cory Booker, urged the crowd to “wake up more men to join this fight.”

The rally is one of the scores scheduled for Tuesday around the country by the American Civil Liberties Union, NARAL Pro-Choice America, Planned Parenthood Action Fund and other abortion rights group. The protests are a response to laws passed recently by Republican state legislatures that amount to the tightest restrictions on abortion in the United States in decades.

Alabama passed an outright ban last week, including for pregnancies resulting from rape or incest, unless the woman’s life is in danger. Other states, including Ohio and Georgia, have banned abortions absent a medical emergency after six weeks of pregnancy or after the fetus’s heartbeat can be detected, which can occur before a woman even realizes she is pregnant.

Protesters outside the Supreme Court waved signs saying “We won’t be punished” and “Protect Safe, Legal Abortion” and were joined by Pete Buttigieg, the South Bend, Indiana, mayor who also is vying for the 2020 nomination. “My entire campaign is about freedom,” he said in a brief interview.

U.S. President Donald Trump, a Republican who opposes abortion, has seized on the issue as one likely to fire up his core supporters, although he considers the Alabama ban too restrictive because it does not make exceptions for incest and rape.

Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, another Democratic 2020 candidate, blamed what she called “outrageous bans” on Trump.

“This is the beginning of President Trump’s war on women,” she told the rally. “If he wants his war, he will have his war, and he will lose.”

The restrictive new laws are contrary to the Roe v. Wade ruling, which affords a woman the right to an abortion up to the moment the fetus would be viable outside the womb, which is usually placed at about seven months, or 28 weeks, but may occur earlier.

The bans have been championed by conservatives, many of them Christian, who say fetuses should have rights comparable to those of infants and view abortion as tantamount to murder. The Supreme Court now has a 5-4 conservative majority following two judicial appointments by Trump.

“This is probably one of the first times I’ve ever felt like it’s real that things could actually be overturned,” Tracy Leaman, 43, an event planner from the Washington area, said at Tuesday’s rally. “The Supreme Court is stacked against us for the first time in my lifetime. I feel like it’s scarier than ever before.”

A federal judge in Mississippi on Tuesday heard arguments in a lawsuit challenging the state’s new fetal-heartbeart abortion law. District Judge Carlton Reeves asked questions suggesting he thought the new law to be even more unconstitutional than the state’s 15-week abortion ban he struck down last year, USA Today reported.

(Reuters)

After Push From US Senators, Kashmiri Athletes Granted Visas

Abid Hussain Khan and Tanvir Hussain had first been denied visas on January 30 and told that the reason behind the rejection was “current policies.”

Abid Hussain Khan and Tanvir Hussain had first been denied visas on January 30 and told that the reason behind the rejection was “current policies.”

Tanveer-Hussain

Tanveer Hussain, a Kashmiri athlete who was initially denied a US visa to take part in a New York international championship. Credit: Facebook/World Snowshoe Federation

New Delhi: After pressure from at least two US senators and a small town community in the US, two athletes from Jammu and Kashmir, who were earlier denied visas to the country to participate in the World Snowshoe Championships, have finally received the green signal to attend the event.

Abid Hussain Khan and Tanvir Hussain had first applied and been denied visas on January 30 by the US embassy in New Delhi. They were told that their visas were rejected due to the “current policies”, which was interpreted as a fallout of Donald Trump’s executive order on immigration.

The mayor of the New York state village of Saranac Lake, which was hosting the championship, had said that “it was difficult not to consider” that the presidential order issued on January 27 had played a role in the decision.

When the India’s Ministry of External Affairs had asked for a response from the American mission, the US embassy “categorically denied that it has any linkage to the executive order”.

The US embassy gave additional details for the reason behind the rejection to the Democrat senator from New York Chuck Schumer. Schumer’s office said Hussain and Khan were determined to be ineligible for visas “due to a failure to demonstrate strong ties … to assure their departure after a limited stay in the United States,” according to the local newspaper Adirondack Daily Enterprise.

With their case highlighted in the media and taken up by their hosts with the US government, the duo reapplied for US visas and got another chance this week.

The second visa interview held on February 17 was much different than the one conducted over two weeks ago, which was a quick one. “We had a detailed discussion that lasted for over one hour,” Khan, who is the general secretary of the Snowshoe Federation of India, told The Wire.

They showed all their documents, including the financial and family links, which guaranteed that they would return from the US. “The officer asked a lot of questions, which allowed us the opportunity to show all the documents,” he added. They pointed out that they had travelled to several international events and returned back home as scheduled.

The official conducting the interview also questioned the two about why they told the media that denial of their visa application was linked to the US president’s travel ban. “I showed him what we had said exactly… Also told him that interpretation of how people depicted it was not under our control. He seemed to understand”.

At the end, both of them were told that their visa application had been accepted. “He told us our application has been accepted and hoped that we will travel soon,” Khan said.

Khan added that the change in the US embassy’s decision was entirely due to the push made by Saranac Lake residents and the US senators. “It is a small town with a very well-knit community. They really made all effort to get us there. They even told us that if you don’t get visas, we will rally behind the flag,” he said.

He especially thanked New York Senators Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand.

“MEA said that we had not contacted the ministry, but we had e-mailed our case to the official IDs of the minister Sushma Swaraj and the minister of state M.J. Akbar. We also had written to the sports minister. But, frankly we knew that since the sports ministry was not directly funding us, it would be difficult for them to pursue our case,” Khan said.


The Saranac Lake mayor Clyde Rabideau also credited to the US senators for the changed decision.

“I think all three of our federal representatives were on this, but the two I heard back from where the two senators (Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand). Schumer’s office was in daily contact with me, Abid and Tanveer and the New Delhi consulate. They really pushed this.” Rabideau Adirondak told the local paper.

The mayor also opened an account on a crowd funding website to generate $1500 for the visa expenses for the two Indian athletes.


With their passports expected to be released on February 22, they are planning to fly out the same day.

Meanwhile, Khan is buoyed enough to have higher ambitions for the sport of snow shoeing, which includes trying to host the world championship in India.

“We have got the permission from our sponsors, Jammu and Kashmir tourism to bid for the world championship. The deadline is gone for 2018. But, we don’t know if anybody has bid for it yet. If no one has done it so far, we will bid to host the world championship in 2018,” he told The Wire.