Mexico court to reconsider abortion law

Mexico's Supreme Court will consider the constitutionality of a new law that legalises abortion in Mexico City.

Mexico's Supreme Court will consider the constitutionality of a new law that legalises abortion in Mexico City.

Last month, Mexico City's legislature made abortion legal in the capital during the first 12 weeks of a woman's pregnancy, sparking street demonstrations both for and against the new law.

The decision, which has been criticized by Pope Benedict and other religious figures, is one of the first to legalize abortion in predominantly Catholic Latin America.

The court said in a statement that it accepted a challenge to the law by Mexico's top human rights official, Jose Luis Soberanes, who argued that it violates Mexico's constitution.

The court did not say when it would take up the case.

Mexico's attorney general's office has also challenged the abortion law.

For a law to be declared unconstitutional, eight of the 11 Supreme Court's magistrates must vote against it.

On a recent trip to Brazil, Pope Benedict said Catholic politicians who supported abortion risked excommunication from the church and should not receive communion. The Catholic Church says abortion is the taking of a human life and considers it a grave sin.

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