An
11-year-old girl, who according to authorities was raped by her
stepfather, gave birth to a healthy baby girl Thursday morning in
Asunción, Paraguay.
Source: CNN
Asunción Red Cross Director Mario Villalba confirmed the birth to CNN.
The
baby was born by C-section and weighed 3 kilograms (about 6.6 pounds).
Villalba said both the baby and her mother "are in good health
condition." He also said doctors are monitoring them closely. They are
expected to be released within three days if no complications arise.
The case shocked Paraguayans when it came to light in May.
At the time the girl was 10 years old and 22 weeks pregnant.
Authorities immediately arrested the girl's mother. The woman, who
according to reports is 32 years old, was charged with child neglect and
complicity.
Paraguayan police also launched a manhunt for the girl's stepfather, identified as 42-year-old Gilberto Benitez Zárate. Benitez was arrested shortly
thereafter and charged with rape and abuse of a child. He denied the
charges and demanded a DNA test to back up his claim.
The
girl's mother was released on bond in June, but still faces charges.
Once out of jail, she told CNN that she went to authorities asking for help in November 2013.
"I
was the one who reported all of this, asking for justice to be done and
hoping that something would be done, but prosecutors dismissed the
case," she said in an exclusive interview with CNN en Español on June
25. "Otherwise, this would have never gotten to this point," the
unidentified mother said.
Paraguayan
Health Minister Antonio Barrios told CNN earlier that neighbors were the
ones who had reported the abuse, and that the mother had denied
accusations against her husband.
The
pregnancy was discovered in late April when the mother took her daughter
to the hospital after the girl complained of abdominal pain.
The mother wanted the girl to have an abortion. Human rights groups, especially Amnesty International, supported her position.
"The
physical and psychological impact of forcing this young girl to
continue with an unwanted pregnancy is tantamount to torture," Guadalupe
Marengo, Deputy Director for the Americas at Amnesty International said
then. "The Paraguayan authorities cannot sit idly by while this young
rape survivor is forced to endure more agony and torment."
But
Paraguayan authorities refused. Health minister Antonio Barrios said
that, even in this case, an abortion would be a violation of Paraguayan
law.
"We're totally against
interrupting the pregnancy," Barrios said in May. "The girl is getting
assistance permanently in a shelter and the pregnancy is progressing
normally without a problem." There was no comment from the Paraguayan
government Thursday regarding the birth.
Erika
Guevara, Amnesty's Americas director, said Thursday that the fact that
the girl did not die "does not excuse the human rights violations she
suffered at the hands of the Paraguayan authorities, who decided to
gamble with her health, life and integrity despite overwhelming evidence
that this pregnancy was extremely risky and despite the fact that she
was a rape victim and a child."
Paraguay
has one of the strictest abortion laws in the world. It bans abortions
except in cases where the pregnancy endangers the mother's life. In the
case of the 11-year-old, doctors ruled that, in spite of her age, the
pregnancy did not endanger her life. Violation of the law carries a
maximum sentence of five years in prison.
According to a 2013 United Nations report, 2
million girls under age 14 give birth in developing countries every
year, many of whom suffer resulting long-term or fatal health problems.
It estimated that 70,000 adolescents die each year from complications
from pregnancy or childbirth.
In Paraguay, 684 girls between the ages of 10 and 14 gave birth last year. Most of the minors had been victims of sexual abuse, according to government figures.Source: CNN

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