Almost 2/3 of the world's women currently reside in countries where abortion may be obtained on request for a wide variety of reasons, including social, economic, personal, and no reason whatsoever. Only eight countries prohibit under any circumstances. All Muslim nations permit it in certain circumstances, usually to save the life of the mother, but some predominantly Muslim countries provide for other reasons (including the unborn child having medical problems or birth defects).
If the actors at the Biblical conference had been genuine Muslims, they likely would not have berated America for decriminalizing abortion at all. While there is no pro-abortion or actual approval of abortion in the world of Islam, there is no ban on it, either. Sharia law nor the Qur'an addresses the issue in any way. Abortion was widely and routinely practiced in Muslim countries until the late 1800s before outside political pressure forced them make it illegal. Some Muslims believe in abortion at will, others believe no abortion under any circumstances, while others think it should be allowed but with certain restrictions. Sounds familiar. Many of the hard line Islamic clerics and imams take the teaching stance that abortion is perfectly fine within the first 40 days of pregnancy, while the vast majority use the 120 days as the yardstick, because in Islam, the fetus is believed to become a living soul after four months of gestation. But these are teachings and recommendations, not laws they are required to follow. Many Imams routinely facilitate illegal abortions.
The idea of abortion being illegal is a relatively recent one in terms of human history. It's actually a recent one in terms of post-Columbus Western Hemisphere history, which ain't all that long a time. Abortion in America has been legal for quite a few more years than it's been illegal. Nearly four times as many. Until the 16th century abortion was a common practice all over the world, except for a small handful of places, mostly in and around Rome. The idea of abortion being illegal was first put forth in the 19th century by fundamentalist Christians and a few Christian medical doctors (most of whom massaged the Hippocratic Oath to be more Christian, despite the Oath's origins) more than anyone else. And ironically, it was the first wave of the feminist movement where they strongly opposed abortion, during the fight for women's suffrage in the US, where the idea of passing laws to criminalize abortion for took root. And of course in the late 1960s and early 1970 during the second wave of the feminist movement is where, once again, abortion and reproductive rights became those same unifying issues among various women's rights groups across the western world, led by the women in the US and Canada.