
Abortion in India: Legal Framework, Reasons & Challenges
- India’s abortion debate reflects constitutional rights, medical ethics, and legal safeguards, highlighted by Supreme Court interventions in late-term rape survivor pregnancy cases under the MTP Act.
About Abortion in India
- Unsafe: India records ~9 lakhs adolescent abortions annually, ~70–80% unsafe procedures.
- Maternal Mortality: Unsafe abortions cause ~8–13% of maternal deaths in India.
Legal Framework
- MTP (Amendment) Act, 2021: It allows abortion up to 24 weeks for minors and rape survivors, requiring written guardian consent under Section 3(4)(a).
- After 24 weeks, abortion is permitted for significant foetal abnormalities certified by a Medical Board.
- POCSO Act: Section 19 of the Act mandates reporting a minor pregnancy to the police, initiating an automatic criminal investigation.
- Constitutional Relief: The Supreme Court invokes Article 142 when statutory limits prevent relief in late-term survivor pregnancies.
Key Judicial Precedents on Abortion of Minors
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Reasons for Abortion in India
- Reproductive Rights: Article 21 and the Puttaswamy judgment affirm bodily autonomy, enabling abortion as a fundamental constitutional right.
- Rape Trauma: Courts prioritise psychological trauma over foetal viability, permitting late-term abortions in exceptional rape cases.
- Health Risks: Late pregnancies in minors increase physical complications and severe mental health risks significantly.
- Legal Framework: MTP Act 2021 permits abortion up to 24 weeks with safeguards for rape survivors.
Significance of Abortion Legalisation
- Public Health: Reduces maternal deaths as unsafe abortions cause 8–13% maternal mortality in India annually.
- Women’s Empowerment: Ensures reproductive autonomy under Article 21 as part of the fundamental right to privacy and bodily integrity.
- Social Justice: Protects rape survivors and minors, with SC allowing 30-week abortions in exceptional trauma cases.
- Healthcare Safety: Promotes institutional care, reducing unsafe abortions, which account for nearly 78% adolescent cases in India.
Challenges in Abortion Governance in India
- Time Constraints: The MTP Act limits abortion to 20 to 24 weeks, restricting late detection cases, and rape survivors often approach courts beyond the limits.
- POCSO Conflict: Mandatory reporting under POCSO delays confidential care and discourages timely abortion access, as doctors must inform police authorities.
- Medical Delays: Medical board approval for post-24-week abortions creates procedural delays, and the Supreme Court frequently intervenes in urgent cases.
- Social Stigma: Deep stigma around abortion and rape leads to underreporting and unsafe abortions, with NFHS showing high adolescent vulnerability.
- Access Gaps: Rural India faces a shortage of certified facilities and gynaecologists, resulting in limited safe abortion access and reliance on unsafe methods.
Way Forward
- Standardised Protocols: Issue national guidelines on foetal viability as the Supreme Court allows 28–30 week abortions in exceptional rape cases under Article 142.
- Decentralised Governance: Create district-level medical boards to reduce delays since state-level approvals often take weeks in urgent abortion cases.
- Rights-Based Approach: Shift to an autonomy-based framework under Article 21, recognising reproductive rights as fundamental constitutional liberty and dignity.
- Capacity Building: Train healthcare providers and expand early abortion access, addressing 78% unsafe adolescent abortions due to limited services.
India’s abortion law is robust and balanced, rooted in Article 21, but effective justice depends on strong implementation, accessible healthcare, and stigma-free reproductive services, affirming that “dignity in choice is dignity in life.”
Reference: The Indian Express
PMF IAS Pathfinder for Mains – Question 683
Q. Despite progressive legal reforms and judicial recognition of reproductive autonomy, access to safe abortion services in India remains uneven and exclusionary. Critically analyse the key challenges in the implementation of the MTP framework and suggest measures for ensuring affordable, accessible, and rights-based reproductive healthcare. (250 Words) (15 Marks)
Approach
- Introduction: Write a brief introduction about abortion in India.
- Body: Write about the legal framework and judicial recognition of reproductive autonomy, mention key challenges in the implementation of the MTP framework and suggest measures for ensuring affordable, accessible, and rights-based reproductive healthcare.
- Conclusion: Emphasis on effective implementation and a robust and balanced approach to ensure reproductive justice in practice.















