Since 2016, women in Poland have been taking to the streets for their rights. They continue to demonstrate, fighting one of the most restrictive abortion laws in Europe. Illustrator Magdalena Kaszuba tells their story in a comic.
The long fight for self-determination and the abortion right
Between 1956 and 1993, legal abortion was possible in Poland if the pregnant woman was living in difficult social conditions or if the health of the foetus or the woman was at risk. Abortion was also allowed if the pregnancy resulted from a criminal act. The Act of 7 January 1993 on “Family Planning, Protection of the Human Embryo and Conditions for the Admissibility of Termination of Pregnancy”, the so-called “abortion compromise”, tightened the rules. From then on, a legal termination could only be performed in three cases: if the pregnancy posed a risk to the life or health of the woman, if there was evidence of severe and irreversible foetal deformities, or if the pregnancy resulted from a criminal act. The law was tightened further on 22 October 2020 in a Constitutional Tribunal ruling that abortions for congenital defects were not constitutional.
Thus, the law regulating access to termination of pregnancy in Poland is now one of the strictest in Europe.