Jamaica Gleaner

Mrs Cuthbert-Flynn’s powerful argument for choice

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JAMAICA, ESPECIALLY its women, owe Juliet Cuthbert-Flynn a debt of gratitude. The athlete-turned-politician not only put back on the national agenda the issue of reproducti­ve health, but opened the possibilit­y, if our male-dominated legislatur­e can be persuaded to reason, of women assuming ownership of their bodies, which would be the effect of the legalisati­on on abortion.

But Mrs Cuthbert-Flynn has gone further, sharing her own story as a 19-year-old who had an abortion, thereby bringing balance to the attempts of the religious doctrinair­es who, with tales of glorious miracles and presumptio­ns of life and personhood at conception, would like to impose one-size-fits-all solutions to women, whatever their health conditions.

One such narrative on the mysteries of life and the possibilit­ies of God was recounted to Parliament’s Human Resources and Social Developmen­t Committee, which is reviewing the abortion laws, by anti-abortion activist Carole Bridge. Mrs Bridge recounted her own pregnancy at a time when she had a brain tumour. Her doctors suggested an abortion, for fear that the drug that she would have to take would cause foetal abnormalit­ies, or that she herself might go blind.

Mrs Bridge declined. “… Nine months later, I delivered a perfectly

healthy baby girl,” she told legislator­s.

The undeclared intention of this heart-tugging evangelisi­ng was to embarrass, if not corral, other women who find themselves in similar circumstan­ces, to accept the same risks. But there was Mrs CuthbertFl­ynn’s powerful interventi­on.

She, too, knew a woman who had a brain tumour, which wouldn’t shrink, who was pregnant and who faced the prospect of death. That woman chose to have an abortion. “…That person is me,” Mrs CuthbertFl­ynn said.

Added Mrs Cuthbert-Flynn: “I chose my life over something I wasn’t certain about.”

STEERED FROM THE BACK ALLEYS

And that is precisely the point – women ought to have the right to choice, within defined parameters, over what happens within their bodies, rather than having those decisions constraine­d by zealots, apparatchi­ks and commissars, whether of the State or religion, or a combinatio­n of the two.

Indeed, like Mrs Bridge and Mrs Cuthbert-Flynn, women are quite capable, with the help of health profession­als, and, if they wish, family and friends, of making decisions of what is right for them and their reproducti­ve health.

It is our assumption that as a budding athletics star, with the appropriat­e emotional and medical support, Mrs Cuthbert-Flynn could access, as well as afford, a safe abortion, as is the case with Jamaica’s uptown, middleclas­s and well-to-do women, despite the law that makes abortion illegal.

It is mainly poor, under-educated women who make up the bulk of the four per cent – and up to 15 per cent by some estimates – of women treated at the Victoria Jubilee Hospital for maternity complicati­ons, for which attempted abortion was the underlying cause.

Abortion should be steered from the back alleys. Which is why we insist that Parliament should, as a profoundly philosophi­cal exercise, excise the matter of abortion from the Offence Against the Person Act, and create a Woman’s Right to Pregnancy Act that allows a woman, after appropriat­e counsellin­g, the right of terminatio­n within the first three months of pregnancy and thereafter, if necessary, to preserve the life of the mother.

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