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About 90,000 women in the Philippines suffer from abortion complications and an estimated 1,000 die each year, said the report, published last year. Influential bishops have blocked family planning bills in the past by arguing that they would erode moral values and encourage promiscuity and early pregnancies. "Sex is not a game that should be taught to children along with the use of condoms supposedly to avoid disease," Manila Archbishop Gaudencio Rosales told a crowd of 40,000 people assembled in the capital two moths ago in one of the biggest such rallies yet. Instead, he called for abstinence. One of bill's opponents is the Philippine boxing star Rep. Manny Pacquiao. He said he never would have been born, and never have become an international champion, if his parents practiced birth control. "God said go forth and multiply. He did not say go and have just one or two children," Pacquiao said Tuesday after meeting with the Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines. Sen. Miriam Defensor-Santiago, who is in favor of the bill, called Pacquiao a "fundamentalist" and said he was interpreting the Bible literally. Rep. Edcel Lagman, one of the bill's main proponents, said the opposition mainly comes from the church hierarchy, not from ordinary citizens of the predominantly Roman Catholic nation.
[Associated
Press;
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