Argentinian women hit the streets in Buenos Aires to protest against an abortion bill which will be put to a vote on August 8 by Argentina's Senate

Iran Press/ America-Argentinian women  came to the streets in Buenos Aires to hold protest rally against an abortion bill which will be put to a vote on August 8 by Argentina’s Senate. If most of the 72 senators approve the text, abortion will be legalized.

"Ahead of Wednesday's Senate hearing, 32 women in Buenos Aires donned the white bonnets and red cloaks worn by women forced into childbearing servitude on the television drama "The Handmaid's Tale," based on Margaret Atwood's dystopian novel" AFP reported.

At the Rio de la Plata, they also raised their green handkerchiefs, a symbol of the struggle for legal abortion.

It is a thorny issue in Argentina -- which is mostly Roman Catholic and the home country of Pope Francis, the first pontiff born in Latin America. Many in the country believe the church teaching that life begins at conception and that abortion is murder.

"Doing this helps us express what is not being heard -- which is that abortions happen. And we need them to be done in a safe place, open to the community, to all women," Bernardina Rossini, one of the marchers, told AFP.

The women embraced, and several wept openly. Most were between 30 and 60 years old, and between them, a girl walked with her mother.

"It's a way of saying this: it's our body, and we want to decide on what happens ourselves," Rossini stressed.

Approved by Congress' lower house on June 14, the bill sent to the Senate would legalize abortion in the first 14 weeks of pregnancy and provide for conscientious objection for practitioners, but not for hospitals.

In the August 8 vote, senators will have to decide on the version of the text adopted by the deputies. The vote is expected to be tight -- but if a majority of the 72 senators approve the text, abortion will be legalized.

video by AFP