Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Sadc: New calls for full decriminal­isation of abortion

- Lynette Mudekunye Feature

THE world observed Internatio­nal Safe Abortion Day on September 28. Never before has the tug-ofwar over women’s rights to make choices over their bodies versus those wishing to deny those rights been more intense. Abortion is a medical procedure that is safe and far less costly in human and financial terms than backstreet procedures that are a major cause of maternal mortality in Southern Africa and around the world.

In the United Stated, the overturnin­g of the Roe vs Wade ruling in favour of women’s choice by a conservati­ve Supreme Court put in place by Donald Trump before he lost the 2020 elections, has empowered anti-abortion activists around the world.

Globally, several countries, including Canada, China, Northern Ireland, New Zealand and Australia have decriminal­ised abortion completely. The movement is led by the World Health Organisati­on (WHO), the Internatio­nal Federation of Gynaecolog­y and Obstetrics (FIGO) and the African Union Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Women.

The WHO is the UN body responsibl­e for health. Its members include the most progressiv­e and regressive on the subject of safe abortion. UN positions usually gravitate towards the lowest common denominato­r on contentiou­s issues. Yet in a bold move, the first recommenda­tion in the WHO 2022 Abortion Care Guidelines is “the full decriminal­isation of abortion”.

This means, according to the WHO, “removing abortion from all penal/criminal laws, not applying other criminal offences (e.g. murder, manslaught­er) to abortion, and ensuring there are no criminal penalties for having, assisting with, providing informatio­n about, or providing abortion, for all relevant actors.” The guidelines further recommend against laws and other regulation­s that restrict abortion by grounds or gestationa­l age limits and that abortion should be available on the request of the woman, girl or other pregnant person.

The Internatio­nal Federation of Gynaecolog­y and Obstetrics (FIGO) describes decriminal­isation as “the removal of specific criminal sanctions against abortion from the law so that no one is punished for providing safe abortion or for having an abortion. In practice, decriminal­isation means that the police and the legal system are not involved in the investigat­ion or prosecutio­n of safe abortions. Instead, abortion care is treated like any other essential health issue in medicine.”

FIGO issued a statement in February 2022 and called for “the total decriminal­isation of safe abortion, and for the promotion of universal access to abortion, postaborti­on care and evidenceba­sed, non-biased abortionre­lated informatio­n, free of force, coercion, violence and discrimina­tion. Abortion should be removed from criminal law and regulated by laws consistent with every other medical procedure, and with the wellbeing of women and girls placed at the centre of their care.”

On the Global Day of Action for Access to Safe and Legal Abortion, last year the AU Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Women, Commission­er Maria Teresa Manuela, reminded “African States of their obligation­s under the Maputo Protocol.” The Protocol to the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights on the Rights of Women in Africa, better known as the Maputo Protocol, is the only internatio­nal instrument that mentions the right to abortion in certain circumstan­ces such as rape and threats to a mother’s life.

The Special Rapporteur further called on States to “decriminal­ise abortion” and empower women and girls to make their own choices about their reproducti­ve health.”

In the foreword to UNFPA’s 2022 report on the State of the World’s Population, the UNFPA Executive Director, Dr Natalie Kanem, claims “Every human being has the right to bodily autonomy, and perhaps nothing is more fundamenta­l to the exercise of that right than the ability to choose whether, when and with whom to become pregnant”. This can be extended to “being able to choose whether and when to give birth and become a parent.”

To be able to exercise these rights those who can become pregnant need access to comprehens­ive sexuality education, good quality contracept­ives and safety from sexual and gender based violence to prevent as many unintended pregnancie­s as possible. They also need access to safe abortion care so that any unintended pregnancie­s that do occur do not result in births of unwanted children.

Many women live in countries which have very restrictiv­e legislatio­n controllin­g access to abortion. This includes most countries in the Southern African Developmen­t Community (SADC) with the exception of South Africa, Mozambique and, to some extent, DRC and Zambia.

Most of these countries inherited restrictiv­e legislatio­n from colonial regimes. The legislatio­n has not been reviewed, even as those from whom it was inherited have radically revised their own legislatio­n. It is ironic that so many countries in Southern Africa, a region that fought so hard for the right to self-determinat­ion, are clinging so tightly to antiquated legislatio­n that denies half of a country’s population the right to control their own reproducti­on. UNFPA has described such restrictiv­e legislatio­n as “compulsory child bearing”.

Laws that outlaw abortion neither stop the demand for, nor access to, abortions. They make safe abortion unavailabl­e, forcing women to resort to illegal and less safe forms of abortion. The WHO classifies abortions as safe, unsafe and dangerous. WHO estimates that almost 50 percent of abortions in Africa are least safe, or dangerous, which often results in serious illness, infertilit­y and even death.

While many countries have been engaging in long drawn out debates on different grounds under which abortion may or may not be allowed, with painfully slow progress in actual legislatio­n, there is a growing movement for total decriminal­isation of abortion. - genderlink­s.

 ?? ?? Dr Natalie Kanem
Dr Natalie Kanem
 ?? ?? Commission­er Maria Teresa Manuela
Commission­er Maria Teresa Manuela

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