Business Day

Parliament rejects ACDP MP’s abortion bill

• Health committee declares private members bill ‘undesirabl­e’, but MP Dudley says debate has now been started

- Tamar Kahn Science and Health Writer kahnt@businessli­ve.co.za

Parliament has rejected the African Christian Democratic Party (ACDP) MP Cheryllyn Dudley’s private members bill on abortion, which critics have seen as a thinly veiled attempt to roll back women’s hard-won rights to safely terminate unwanted pregnancie­s.

Until the Choice on Terminatio­n of Pregnancy Act came into effect in 1997, abortions were only available in SA under extremely limited conditions. They required the approval of two doctors who were not involved in the matter, and in some cases a magistrate or psychiatri­st as well.

The act permits abortions within the first 12 weeks of a pregnancy, and at a later stage under certain conditions.

Dudley has tried to restrict women’s access to abortion before by proposing an amendment to the constituti­on to include the right to life of the unborn child.

Her Choice on Terminatio­n of Pregnancy Amendment Bill was tabled in parliament in December 2017 and proposed showing ultrasound images of their fetuses to all women seeking abortions, along with mandatory counsellin­g.

It introduced a requiremen­t that for abortions between 13 and 20 weeks, a social worker and a doctor must agree that the pregnancy would significan­tly affect the socioecono­mic circumstan­ces of the woman concerned. It also sought to scrap provisions that permit thirdtrime­ster abortions if there is a risk of injury to fetuses.

When the bill was debated by parliament’s health committee in May, the ANC’s Fish Mahlalela said its proposals were unconstitu­tional as they would limit a woman’s right to make decisions about her own body and her reproducti­ve health.

The World Health Organisati­on advised the department of health that the bill’s conditions for obtaining abortions were not evidence-based, were at odds with its guidelines, and would make it harder for women to have abortions.

The department of health’s Yogan Pillay said at the time that the bill’s proposals for mandatory counsellin­g and ultrasound imaging were prohibitiv­ely expensive and would make it harder for women to safely end unwanted pregnancie­s.

While abortion in the state sector is free, services are patchy and many women still opt for dangerous illegal abortions. There were 105,358 abortions in public health facilities in 2016/2017, according to figures provided to Africa Check by the department of health.

The committee declared the bill undesirabl­e, and it was rejected by the National Assembly on Tuesday.

“For this bill, it is the end of the road. But it achieved what I hoped it would,” said Dudley.

“Discussion­s were held, and we are starting to learn as a country how to disagree more respectful­ly. This is a difficult issue and people do get worked up, but when I gave my declaratio­n in the house it was sombre. There has been a big attempt by everyone to hear the other’s argument,” she said.

 ?? /Jackie Clausen/Sunday Times ?? In demand: Until 1997, abortions were only available in SA under very limited circumstan­ces.
/Jackie Clausen/Sunday Times In demand: Until 1997, abortions were only available in SA under very limited circumstan­ces.

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