The tragic
story of the death of a schoolgirl in Swaziland /eSwatini after she had an
illegal abortion highlights the way women suffer because of the law in the
kingdom.
The Sunday edition of the Swazi
Observer reported (31 March 2019) that the girl (it did not name
her or publish her age) was given a conconction supplied by a traditional healer. She later died.
The Observer reported, ‘After the abortion, the weak girl is said to
have been locked in the one-room flat within the homestead for three days and
her body was later found dumped in the nearby forest.’ The police found the
foetus at another bush.
The newspaper reported a 22-year-old
man, described as the girl’s boyfriend, had been charged with her murder
because he gave her the concoction to induce abortion.
Because abortions are
illegal in Swaziland it is difficult to say accurately how many are performed
in the kingdom. However, in August 2018 the Times
of Swaziland reported that every month, nurses at the Raleigh Fitkin
Memorial (RFM) Hospital in Manzini attended more than 100 cases of young women
who had committed illegal abortions.
The IRIN news agency, quoting
the Family Life Association of Swaziland (FLAS), a family planning organization,
reported that in October 2012 more than 1,000 women were
treated for abortion-related complications at a single clinic in Swaziland. Many
of the deaths were the result of haemorrhaging, while others resulted from the
patient’s delay in seeking medical treatment for other complications stemming
from illegal terminations.
In November 2012 the IRIN news agency reported that 16 percent of all women deaths in the
government hospital in Mbabane that year were the result of botched abortions.
It said that this figure was only those cases that were reported, there were
certainly other deaths unreported.
In December 2018 the Swazi Observer reported the number of illegal ‘backstreet’
abortions taking place in Swaziland was ‘escalating’ because social media had
made it easier to obtain abortion pills.
According to the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, abortion is prohibited in Swaziland except in
cases of necessity but there is disagreement about what constitutes a case of
necessity.
‘The
majority position of commentators is that a case of necessity exists only when
an abortion is performed to save the life of the pregnant woman. However, it is possible that a case of
necessity need not be so serious and that an abortion could be performed in
cases of serious threat to both physical and mental health, foetal defect and
rape. There is no case law on this issue in Swaziland,’ the report stated.
The Swazi Constitution provides that abortion might be allowed on medical or therapeutic grounds, including where a doctor certifies that continued pregnancy will endanger the life or constitute a serious threat to the physical health of the woman; continued pregnancy will constitute a serious threat to the mental health of the woman; there is serious risk that the child will suffer from physical or mental defect of such a nature that the child will be irreparably seriously handicapped.
The Swazi Constitution provides that abortion might be allowed on medical or therapeutic grounds, including where a doctor certifies that continued pregnancy will endanger the life or constitute a serious threat to the physical health of the woman; continued pregnancy will constitute a serious threat to the mental health of the woman; there is serious risk that the child will suffer from physical or mental defect of such a nature that the child will be irreparably seriously handicapped.
However,
no law exists to put the constitutional provisions into effect.
The UN
report stated there were no legal provisions dealing with the professional
qualifications required to perform an abortion, the place where the procedure
must be performed or the period during pregnancy when an abortion can be performed.
The UN
stated, ‘Induced abortion is a
particularly significant problem among teenage girls. Faced with the prospect of an unwanted
pregnancy, many teenage girls resort to abortion to avoid expulsion from
school. Unmarried teenage women are more likely to have unwanted pregnancies
because of the barriers they face in obtaining contraceptives. For example, it
is reported that health workers often require proof of the husband’s
authorization before dispersing contraceptives, even though this is not a legal
requirement.’
IRIN reported that in 2011
three Swazi nurses were arrested and given 15 years jail for assisting in
terminations.
‘They were helping the
poorest of the poor, women who are truly desperate and who cannot do what most
Swazi women do who need an abortion. Most women just travel across the border
to South Africa,’ Alicia Simelane, a Manzini healthcare worker and midwife,
told IRIN.
‘Also, there are the scared
little girls, the rape survivors and the survivors of incest who dare not talk
about their experiences to anyone. Counselling hardly exists for such girls in
Swaziland. Then there are the women who have seven children and a husband who
refuses to wear a condom, and they cannot bear to have more children. These are
desperate women, and they will go to anyone who they think will help them,’ she
said.
In the absence of legal
abortions, mothers are suspected of practising infanticide. Local media reports
of new-borns found dead in isolated areas are commonplace.
In
2017, the United Nations Human Rights
Committee in Geneva recommended that Swaziland adopt laws allowing voluntary abortions.
Richard Rooney
See
also
U.S. halts
funding to Swaziland NGO as anti-abortion policy bites
https://swazimedia.blogspot.com/2018/08/us-halts-funding-to-swaziland-ngo-as.html
No comments:
Post a Comment