I will answer in English since that will be a lot faster. It is a lot easier for me.
There already has been a substantial reopening of discussion on both abortion and of course sexual and reproductive health in general in the United States under the Obama administration. Certainly, as Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton plays a very important leadership role in that respect, but we can see in the appropriations for foreign assistance, for example, that the largest amount ever appropriated in U.S. history for reproductive health--or family planning, as they tend to call it--was passed.
In terms of the issue of abortion, there are a number of issues that will, I think, restrain progress. First of all, there's the difficulty of dealing with the Congress, where in spite of having a large majority, as we saw in the debate on health care, there are a number of Democrats who have anti-choice views, so that puts certain limits on the administration's ability to move forward.
Nevertheless, one of the first things President Obama did was to rescind the global gag rule, and there are currently some very strong initiatives to try to get a permanent rescinding of the global gag rule so that no future administration can re-implement it.