African nations decline joint stand on legal abortion
Ronaldinho  |  by www.cwnews.com. All rights reserved. 6.11 | 20:41

Health ministers from African countries have resisted pressure to adopt a joint statement supporting legal abortion, the Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute (C-Fam) reports. Meeting in Mozambique, the health ministers of the African Union (AU) discussed a continent-wide policy on reproductive health, reports Samantha Singson in C-Fam's . Although some participants wanted to include abortion in a range of issues, they were defeated.

The African states-- most of which prohibit or strictly limit abortion-- raised the issue of including abortion, but participants could not reach a consensus. An early draft version of the AU document had referred to "unsafe" abortion in tackling the issue of maternal mortality. The draft had called on member states to "provide safe abortion services to the fullest extent of the law," to provide for the training of "service providers in the provision of comprehensive safe abortion care services where national law allows," and to "refurbish and equip facilities for provision of comprehensive abortion care services.

" AU member states failed to reach an agreement on a unified policy to address unsafe abortion and opted instead to take up the matter individually. The African document did call on member states to seek action on "sexual and reproductive health." Abortion proponents have long argued that a right to abortion should be guaranteed by international law because restricting abortion leads to high maternal mortality.

However, UN reports such as the 1991 World Health Organization report "Maternal Mortality, A Global Factbook," conclude that decreased maternal mortality rates in the developed world, "coincided with the development of obstetric techniques and improvements in the general health status of women." Subsequent WHO reports have identified low social and economic status, unskilled birthing attendants, and poor nutrition as underlying causes of maternal mortality. They also identify anemia and malaria as primary indirect causes of maternal deaths in Africa.

Of the 53 member states of the AU, 25 prohibit abortion altogether. An additional 12 members allow abortion for the protection of the health of the mother. Only 3 African countries allow abortion on demand.

Conservatives are concerned that some will use the issue of "unsafe abortion" under the guise of reducing maternal mortality to pressure African countries to liberalize laws and restrictions on abortion.

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Keywords: Maternal Mortality, c Fam
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