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Desperate measures: Pakistani women seek abortions as birth control

February 18, 2019
Ayeesha, center, an employee of the Pakistani NGO Aware Girls, briefs other employees on the means to treat and answer calls on the hotline “Sahailee” (friend in Urdu) dedicated to abortion in Peshawar, Pakistan, in this Dec. 17, 2018 file photo. — AFP
Ayeesha, center, an employee of the Pakistani NGO Aware Girls, briefs other employees on the means to treat and answer calls on the hotline “Sahailee” (friend in Urdu) dedicated to abortion in Peshawar, Pakistan, in this Dec. 17, 2018 file photo. — AFP

PESHAWAR, Pakistan — Pregnant, desperate, and poor, Pakistani mother Zameena faced a stark choice: risk her life by having a secret abortion, or risk her life bearing her husband a sixth child.

In the end, she opted for the former, one of more than two million women a year to do so in a country where religious leaders are critical of family planning measures and there is a lack of sex education and access to contraception.

Almost half of all pregnancies in Pakistan — around 4.2 million each year — are unplanned and around 54 percent of those end in termination, according to a report by US research firm Guttmacher Institute.

“Three years ago, when my daughter was born, the doctor told me that I should stop having babies because it would be bad for my health,” said Zameena, using an assumed name, from her home in the northwest city of Peshawar.

“But whenever I say that to my husband, he tells me to trust God,” the 35-year-old added. “My husband is a religious man... he wants to have a line of sons.”

Decades ago, a family planning campaign with the slogan “do bache hi ache” or “two children is good” was rejected by religious leaders as well as nationalists who wanted a bigger population to rival the 1.2 billion people in neighboring India.

Today with a population of around 207 million, Pakistan’s baby boom is stretching resources beyond capacity and experts warn of trouble ahead.

Zameena said she frequently suggested to her husband that they practice family planning, but he refused.

“My mother-in-law had nine kids,” said Zameena. “When I complain to my husband that I can’t have more babies, he answers: ‘If my mother didn’t die, you should also stay alive’.”

Abortion is allowed in Pakistan if the health of the mother is in danger. But many doctors invoke their Muslim faith and refuse to carry them out.

As a result, some women abort illegally and authorities largely turn a blind eye to the situation.

The preferred method is by ingesting Misoprostol, an over-the-counter drug used to treat ulcers, which causes the expulsion of the embryo. It can also cause serious complications for the mother.

NGO Aware Girls counsels those who call its hotline on how such drugs should be used safely and when to seek emergency or professional treatment at a clinic.

“Most of us know women who have died of an abortion,” said Aware Girls co-founder Gulalai Ismail.

Zameena was one of the lucky ones — she knew where to go for help once she decided to terminate her latest pregnancy.

At the other end of the Aware Girls hotline, counselor Ayeesha reassured and advised her on what medicines to take and in which dosage.

They insist that women must never be alone when they attempt such procedures.

“My work saves women’s lives. When they call, they are willing to do anything to have an abortion,” explained the 26-year-old.

Ayeesha estimated that she fields around 350 calls a month. Most women who contact the NGO know very little about contraception. Access to condoms, the most well known option, is limited and even when they can be bought, it requires the man to agree.

According to official statistics, only around 35 percent of Pakistani women use any form of non-abortive birth control despite them being inexpensive. — AFP


February 18, 2019
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