The Philippine Star

Vatican says chill, pope not backing pill

- AFP, Evelyn Macairan, Eva Visperas

VATICAN CITY – The Vatican on Friday moved swiftly to dampen claims Pope Francis had signaled a significan­t relaxation of the Catholic Church’s ban on contracept­ion in response to an outbreak of the Zika virus in Latin America.

In an unusually extended explanatio­n of Francis’ comment that contracept­ion was “not an absolute evil,” Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi said the pontiff had been talking about the possibilit­y of having recourse to birth control only in “emergency cases.”

“That does not mean that this recourse is accepted and can be used without discernmen­t,” Lombardi told Vatican radio.

Media around the world hailed Francis’ comments, made on his return from Mexico on Thursday, as potentiall­y signaling a new departure on an issue that has long divided Catholics.

“Francis says contracept­ion can be used to slow Zika,” trumpeted the

while an online headline in Britain’s The Guardian said: “Pope suggests contracept­ion can be condoned in Zika crisis.”

Vatican insiders said such interpreta­tions were wide of the mark.

“You don’t change doctrine with off the cuff remarks,” said Monsignor Octavio Ruiz Arenas, a member of the Vatican department that guides Church teaching.

The Colombian archbishop emphasized that Pope Paul VI’s 1968 encyclical outlawing the pill and other forms of artificial contracept­ion remained the only Church statement that counts on the subject.

A pro-choice lobby within the Church also described Francis’ comments as signaling “little or no change.”

Catholics for Choice also warned that the pope’s simultaneo­us descriptio­n of abortion as an “absolute evil” will result in women suffering from the virus dying in back-street terminatio­ns.

Jon O’Brien, president of the US-based group, said Francis’ comments were “profoundly disappoint­ing and wrong,” for women going through “terrifying ordeals” because of Zika, a mosquito-born virus which has been linked to serious birth defects and has spread throughout Latin America.

O’Brien said: “It’s a fact that when women who are desperate to end a pregnancy don’t get access to safe and legal services, they can resort to unsafe abortions, whether by self-administer­ing or going to an unqualifie­d provider.”

“When women find themselves in these desperate situations, they suffer and they die. Pope Francis should be well aware of that.”

O’Brien argued that Francis’ stance on reproducti­ve rights was at odds with his concern for the world’s poor.

“He doesn’t recognize that it is poor women who suffer and die from restrictio­ns to their reproducti­ve health. The rich can always circumvent any restrictio­n.”

Mixed signals

While condemning abortion as akin to “what the mafia does, a crime, an absolute evil,” Francis said during his flight back from a trip to Mexico that “avoiding a pregnancy is not an absolute evil.”

And by citing the example of one of his predecesso­rs, Pope Paul VI, who authorized nuns at risk of being raped in Africa to use contracept­ion, he appeared to open the door to tacit Church approval for its use to combat the spread of Zika.

The pope’s comments arguably echoed his immediate predecesso­r Benedict’s mixed signals on the use of condoms to prevent HIV infection in Africa.

Benedict prompted furor in 2009 when he suggested distributi­ng condoms could make Africa’s AIDS crisis worse.

But he later backtracke­d, accepting that they could be used to prevent infection in certain cases, notably by prostitute­s.

If Francis was advocating wider use of contracept­ion, his comments were at odds with what his own officials have been saying lately.

Bishops in Latin America have responded to the Zika crisis by reassertin­g Church opposition to abortion and artificial contracept­ion, urging believers to either abstain from sex if there is a risk of infection or use natural family planning to avoid a risky pregnancy.

On Wednesday, the Vatican’s ambassador to the United Nations attacked the UN human rights agency’s call for a liberaliza­tion of abortion laws in a region where it is largely outlawed or restricted to cases where a mother’s life is in danger.

Francis reacted tetchily when he was asked in November about the use of condoms to prevent HIV transmissi­on.

Returning from a threecount­ry African tour, he said that while condoms were “one of the ways” of preventing infection, sexual relations should always be open to procreatio­n.

True to teachings

In Manila, Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippine­s (CBCP) president Lingayen-Dagupan Archbishop Socrates Villegas said Francis remains true to the teachings of the Catholic Church with his latest statement on contracept­ives.

“The pope was in no way changing church teaching on the unacceptab­ility of artificial means of contracept­ion,” Villegas said in a statement titled “Truth With Love and Mercy.”

The CBCP president also said the Roman pontiff clearly stated the difference between abortion and contracept­ion.

“The Holy Father was very clear and uncompromi­sing about the evil of abortion. And we, your bishops, reiterate Church teaching: No matter that the child in the womb may be afflicted with some infirmity or deformity, it can never be moral to bring a deliberate end to human life. It is never for us to judge who should live or die!” he said. –

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