
Context: The debate on abortion laws has intensified due to increasing court petitions seeking late-term pregnancy terminations. The issue highlights tensions between reproductive autonomy, criminal law, medical ethics, and child protection frameworks.
Abortion Law Framework in India
- Constitutional and Legal Position
- Abortion in India is regulated through the Medical Termination of Pregnancy (MTP) Act, 1971 and relevant provisions of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS).
- The MTP Act creates conditional exceptions to criminal provisions governing pregnancy termination.
- The Supreme Court in 2022 recognised reproductive decisional autonomy as a fundamental constitutional right.
- The judgment extended abortion rights to unmarried women and recognised transgender persons within the reproductive rights framework.
- Gestational Limits under the MTP Act
- The MTP Act generally permits abortion up to 24 weeks of pregnancy under specified conditions.
- Exceptions beyond 24 weeks are currently allowed mainly in cases involving substantial foetal abnormalities or threats to maternal life.
- Courts have occasionally permitted terminations beyond statutory limits in exceptional humanitarian circumstances.
Concerns Faced by Minor Rape Victims
- Delayed Access to Medical Care
- Minor rape survivors often report pregnancies late due to trauma, stigma, fear, and lack of reproductive awareness.
- Many adolescents fail to recognise pregnancy during early stages because of limited sexual health education.
- Social restrictions and financial dependence further delay timely access to healthcare facilities.
- Psychological and Humanitarian Concerns
- Forced continuation of unwanted pregnancies may intensify psychological trauma among sexual assault survivors.
- Minor survivors frequently experience social ostracism, educational disruption, and long-term mental health consequences.
- Denial of safe abortion access may violate dignity, bodily integrity, and decisional autonomy guaranteed under Article 21.
- Institutional and Procedural Barriers
- Healthcare providers often hesitate due to fear of prosecution under overlapping criminal laws such as POCSO.
- Mandatory reporting requirements sometimes discourage minors from approaching formal healthcare institutions for safe abortions.
- Lack of clear protocols near gestational limits creates uncertainty for both doctors and patients.
Associated Challenges
- Criminalisation of Abortion
- Abortion continues to remain linked with criminal law despite recognition of reproductive autonomy by constitutional courts.
- Doctors may face legal liability if procedural requirements under the MTP framework are interpreted strictly.
- Shortage of Healthcare Infrastructure
- India faces shortages of certified abortion providers and adequately equipped healthcare facilities, particularly in rural regions.
- Late-term abortions require specialised medical expertise and advanced institutional infrastructure.
- Persistence of Unsafe Abortions
- Restrictive legal interpretation may push vulnerable women and adolescents towards unsafe abortion practices.
- Unsafe abortions continue to contribute significantly to maternal morbidity and mortality in developing countries.
Need for a Rights-Based Reproductive Framework
- Reproductive Decisional Autonomy
- The Supreme Court has recognised reproductive choice as an integral component of personal liberty and dignity.
- Decisions regarding pregnancy termination should primarily belong to the pregnant person rather than the State.
- Need for Flexible Gestational Approach
- Medical risk should be assessed through clinical judgment instead of rigid statutory gestational limits.
- Humanitarian situations involving rape, mental health crises, or severe socio-economic distress require flexible legal interpretation.
- Global Trends
- Several countries permit early-term abortions on request rather than through conditional legal frameworks.
- Rights-based reproductive frameworks focus on healthcare access, autonomy, and dignity instead of criminal liability.
Need for Harmonisation between MTP Act and POCSO
- Conflict between Child Protection and Reproductive Rights
- Mandatory reporting under the POCSO Act often discourages minors from seeking timely abortion services.
- Adolescents in consensual relationships may avoid healthcare institutions due to fear of criminal consequences.
- Supreme Court’s Harmonisation Effort
- The Supreme Court in 2022 ruled that minors can access abortion services without public disclosure of identity.
- However, implementation gaps continue due to inadequate awareness among healthcare providers and enforcement agencies.
- Humanistic and Ethical Dimensions
- Safe abortion access is closely linked with dignity, bodily autonomy, mental health, and gender justice.
- Compassionate reproductive healthcare remains essential for protecting vulnerable adolescents facing traumatic pregnancies.
- Democratic societies must balance child protection concerns with the constitutional rights and welfare of survivors.
Way Forward
- India should gradually transition from a criminal-centric abortion framework towards a rights-based reproductive healthcare approach.
- Governments should issue clearer medical protocols regarding late-term abortions and humanitarian exceptions.
- Healthcare infrastructure and the availability of certified abortion providers should be strengthened across underserved regions.
- Awareness programmes should improve understanding of reproductive rights among adolescents, families, police, and healthcare professionals.
- Greater coordination between the MTP Act and POCSO framework is necessary to protect both child safety and reproductive autonomy.
Conclusion
- The debate on abortion law ultimately concerns balancing constitutional morality, reproductive autonomy, and protection of vulnerable survivors. A humane and rights-oriented legal framework will strengthen both gender justice and public health outcomes in India.

