Global Times

US Women’s rights breach

Certain states using COVID-19 to deny abortions services

-

Some US states are exploiting the coronaviru­s crisis to restrict access to abortion, a group of independen­t United Nations (UN) rights experts said on Wednesday.

Eight states have used COVID-19 emergency orders – which suspend medical procedures not deemed immediatel­y necessary – to limit access to pregnancy terminatio­ns, said the UN Working Group on Discrimina­tion against Women and Girls.

The group singled out Alabama, Arkansas, Iowa, Louisiana, Ohio, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Texas.

“We regret that the abovementi­oned states, with a long history of restrictiv­e practices against abortion, appear to be manipulati­ng the crisis to severely restrict women’s reproducti­ve rights,” said the group’s vice-chair Elizabeth Broderick.

The independen­t experts do not speak for the UN but report their findings to the world body.

“For many women in the US, bans on abortion during this pandemic will delay abortion care beyond the legal time limit or render abortion services completely inaccessib­le,” said Broderick.

Those who do seek terminatio­n services will be forced to travel interstate, thereby risking their own health and disregardi­ng public health guidelines, the experts said.

“Abortion care constitute­s essential health care and must remain available during the COVID-19 crisis,” Broderick added.

“Restrictio­ns on access to comprehens­ive reproducti­ve health informatio­n and services, including abortion as well as contracept­ion, constitute human rights violations and can cause irreversib­le harm.”

The group said it was “inherently discrimina­tory” to women to deny them access to services only they require.

It said the move prevented women from exercising control over their own bodies and lives.

Whilst the US backed the COVID-19 response resolution at the World Health Organizati­on’s annual assembly last week, it disassocia­ted itself from paragraphs referring to “sexual and reproducti­ve health” or language suggesting that abortion is included in the provision of health services.

“The United States believes in legal protection­s for the unborn,” the US mission in Geneva

said.

The working group said that access to safe and legal abortions was “essential and must remain a key component of the UN’s priorities in its responses to the COVID-19 pandemic.”

Broderick said the situation was “the latest example illustrati­ng a pattern of restrictio­ns and retrogress­ions in access to legal abortion care” across the US.

The five-member working group was establishe­d by the UN Human Rights Council in 2010.

Their statement was also endorsed by two further UN experts: the special rapporteur­s on the right to physical and mental health and on violence against women.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China