Updated On: 29 October, 2023 07:20 AM IST | Mumbai | Neerja Deodhar
Mumbai advocates Anubha Rastogi and Rachita Padwal’s work on abortion cases out of a small office has left a big imprint

Rachita Padwal and Anubha Rastogi both reiterate the agency women must have over their own bodies—a thought that guides their work every day. Pic/Atul Kamble
Time is of the essence in these cases,” Anubha Rastogi, an advocate at the Bombay High Court, says at her Fort office. Outside, as the clock strikes two, the bells of the Rajabai Tower toll, underscoring the immediacy she speaks of.
Earlier this week, Rastogi and her associate Rachita Padwal represented a woman who wished to end her 26-week pregnancy. Following a medical board’s assessment about the woman’s mental and physical fitness to undergo the procedure, the HC passed an order allowing the termination. But the lawyers’ work didn’t end there; they made additional suggestions about medical boards themselves—typically comprising a gynaecologist, radiologist, paediatrician, among other experts—and the lack of awareness around them.