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- Environmental groups urge EU 'high risk' label for Sarawak
- Argentina seeks Maduro's arrest for crimes against humanity
- Morales issues Bolivian president 24-hour ultimatum to shake up cabinet
- Armenia and Azerbaijan see progress, but peace treaty seems distant
- World leaders gather at UN as Mideast tensions explode
- Biden's UN goodbye aims to 'Trump-proof' legacy
- Singapore ex-minister set for high-profile corruption trial
- Man Utd, Spurs eye respite from domestic woes in Europa League
- Guatemala picks Supreme Court judges with focus on anti-graft fight
- Jill Biden announces $500 million for women's health research
- Injured All Blacks centre Jordie Barrett out of Australia Test
- 'Lead the future': youth challenge world leaders at UN
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- As wars rage, UN's critics say global body is failing its mission
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Florida restricts abortions, joining wave of US states
Florida on Thursday signed into law a 15-week abortion ban, becoming the latest US state to further restrict reproductive rights in a nationwide push by conservatives.
Tighter restrictions in states including Texas and Idaho come as the Supreme Court looks poised to re-examine the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling that cemented a woman's right to abortion.
The court is now dominated by conservatives following the nomination of three justices by former president Donald Trump.
"We are here today to defend those who can't defend themselves," Florida Governor Ron DeSantis said as he signed the law which reduced the abortion limit from 24 to 15 weeks.
"This will represent the most significant protection for life that's been enacted in this state in a generation," DeSantis, a potential Republican presidential candidate in 2024, added.
Right-wing politicians have launched an assault on abortion, with Democrats, led by President Joe Biden, fighting back to protect access to the procedure.
The Florida law, which comes into force on July 1, includes exemptions if the mother's life is at risk or if the fetus has a fatal abnormality, but not in cases of rape, incest or human trafficking.
"This abortion ban is an attack on our most fundamental freedoms -- the right to control our own bodies, our own futures," said Stephanie Fraim of Planned Parenthood.
A recent bill passed in Idaho allows families of women who have had abortions -- and the father of the fetus -- to sue providers, taking enforcement out of the hands of the state, in a move modeled on a controversial new Texas law.
Other bills are in the works in Missouri, Oklahoma and Wisconsin, with California, Washington state and Vermont taking an opposing stance and promoting pro-choice abortion rights.
D.Schneider--BTB