Yes, apart from that. You'd like to 'whatabout' religions offering up what you see as similarities in religious excess, thinking that allows you to ignore how they're different.
You give an example of a state where abortion is illegal and treated in the law as murder. Within that system a miscarriage was allegedly mistaken for abortion and a woman did time for murder.
But that was not a religious law. It may have reflected the 80 some odd percent Catholic Culture but El Salvador is not a theocracy. It's a democratic republic.
When women who report they've been raped in an Islamic country who's legal system is run on the religious system of Sharia and they are themselves jailed for being immoral that's a religious law written into the law from the Quran.
If you twist and spin them about you can find similar bits in the teachings of Mohammed and Christ but - as already mentioned - one was a slaving, murdering, thieving, warlord who banged a nine year old and the other was pretty much just a hippy.
You can find excesses written into the Bible or the Quran but the examples of those excesses making their way into contemporary life are more often blatant and egregious in Islam.
For example take the Quranic verse 9.29
Three things are embedded in that verse - the Islamic tax on unbelievers called Jizya, enmity for the unbeliever (or Dhimmi) and the order to move always towards the non-Muslim's subjugation through unequal treatment.
And we see how these religious demands make their way into contemporary society in a way that can be blatant, outrageous and egregious to the Western mind.
Here are some examples:
https://www.jihadwatch.org/tag/jizya