U.S. Supreme Court leak stirs abortion passions in Africa
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[May 31, 2022] By
Andrew Cawthorne
(Reuters) - When a desperate and bleeding
17-year-old girl walked into his rural health centre, Kenyan medic
Ismail Mohammed Salim thought he was doing the right thing by helping
her conclude an unwanted and dangerous pregnancy.
Days later, both were in jail.
"I gave an evacuation service to save a patient's life as the government
trained me to do. Then I'm prosecuted," said Salim, who was accused of
performing an illegal abortion and detained in Kilifi town, where he had
to sleep 20-to-a-cell.
"I was in despair."
After a week in custody and a two-year legal process, the clinical
officer and girl were vindicated in March by the High Court, which
reaffirmed Kenya's constitutional provision for abortion services in
emergency or life-threatening situations.
Such cases have given cheer in recent years to abortion rights activists
around Africa, where cultural and religious traditions clash with the
reality of widespread underage and unwanted pregnancies, sometimes by
rape or incest.
Now, however, those activists are looking nervously to the United
States, where a leaked Supreme Court ruling would, if confirmed,
overturn the landmark Roe v Wade decision that legalized abortion there.
"It is a major threat to abortion rights globally," said Evelyne Opondo,
senior regional director for Africa of the Center for Reproductive
Rights, covering Kenya, Uganda, Malawi, Nigeria, Tanzania, Rwanda and
Zambia.
"A lot of us have looked up to the U.S. for a lot of things really, and
perhaps believed too much in their system."
U.S. President Joe Biden eliminated his predecessor Donald Trump's
so-called "global gag" rule banning funds for aid groups that discuss
abortion, and has promised counter-measures should the U.S. Supreme
Court confirm the draft ruling reported by news outlet Politico.
Experts say an overturning of Roe v Wade would have an inevitable major
knock-on effect in Africa, emboldening anti-abortionists and boosting
their funding, much of which comes from American pockets.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), there are around 73
million abortions globally per year, 45% in unsafe conditions. Poor
nations bear the brunt, with 220 women dying for every 100,000 unsafe
abortions.
In Africa, 75% of terminations are unsafe, the WHO says. They occur in
homes or backstreet clinics, sometimes by inserting knitting needles or
bicycle spokes, or drinking bleach.
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Kenyan schoolgirls carry coffins of the 15 foetuses dumped last week
in a river in Nairobi for burial after a requiem mass in Nairobi,
Kenya June 3, 2004. Picture taken June 3, 2004. REUTERS/Antony
Njuguna/File Photo
'WORSE THAN DOGS'
Around the world's poorest continent, a strong anti-abortion lobby
has helped stall some liberalising reproduction bills, including in
the East African bloc's parliament.
Those campaigners say it is a practice akin to murder being imposed
on Africa by Westerners when attention would be better spent on
basics such as schools and clean water.
Kathy Kageni-Oganga, a pastor at Kenya's Sozo Church of God, said
she was praying that Roe v Wade is overturned but would still be
surprised if it happened.
"It would be such a miracle," she said.
Most U.S. experts believe that the U.S. court, with a 6-3
conservative majority including three justices appointed by Trump,
will act to end or cut back abortion rights.
"They kill these babies worse than dogs. Nobody has the right to
decide who lives and who dies, only God," added Kageni-Oganga.
"Abortion is actually very foreign and it's actually taboo. But
people in Africa have been made to believe that it's posh, it's
cool."
The former human resources director, who made headlines in 2019 when
anti-abortion billboards she had placed in the Kenyan capital were
ordered to be taken down, said self-control was the answer to
unwanted pregnancies. "People are behaving as though you'd be
cooking in the kitchen and you suddenly find yourself pregnant," she
said.
Her church had cared for 20 teenagers with crisis pregnancies in
recent years, all of whom kept their babies despite being offered
adoption, Kageni-Oganga added.
Given such religious precepts, social stigma and a mishmash of laws
that in most African nations only allow abortions in extreme
situations, backstreet operations remain rife.
Abortion rights campaigners fear that will worsen if Roe v Wade were
struck down.
"My case was a very big win for me and for the whole medical
fraternity and for the girls who need help," said Salim, the Kenyan
medic. "If there is a setback in America, then it will be a very big
negative for us."
(Reporting by Andrew Cawthorne; Editing by Katharine Houreld and
Alex Richardson)
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