Samoan Women at Risk
MEDIA RELEASE
18 April 2009 Abortion Law Reform Association of NZ
Samoan Women at Risk
A lack of reproductive freedoms for women in Samoa is putting lives at risk, the Abortion Law Reform Association of New Zealand said today.
“Samoa’s restrictive abortion laws, which
in 2004 led to the imprisonment of a hospital nurse for
performing an illegal abortion, are leaving Samoan women
with few options,” Dr. Sparrow said. “Doctors there have
told us that in the wake of that case, more women are trying
to abort themselves or resorting to other illegal practices,
at great danger to their health.”
Dr. Sparrow said the
recent case of the abandoned newborn at Auckland Airport
underscored the need for Samoan women and girls to have
access to all aspects of reproductive care, particularly sex
education, contraception and safe, legal
abortion.
According to a 2006 Unicef report, a “fair proportion” of clients visiting traditional healers were women and girls seeking abortions. And a Samoan representative to the UN told the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women that because abortion was illegal “babies were abandoned at birth, and many women sought the services of backstreet abortionists.”
The UN also reports high numbers of unplanned teenage pregnancies in Samoa, as well as pregnancy-related hospital admissions.
“Samoa’s
abortion laws are similar to those that existed in New
Zealand until 1977, which forced hundreds of New Zealand
women to travel to Australia for abortions,” Dr. Sparrow
said. But for many New Zealand women then, as for Samoan
women today, that is only an option for those who can afford
it.”
Dr. Sparrow said there had been calls for
change, including from Samoa’s Chief Justice, but so far,
efforts at reform had foundered. “We hope, for the sake
of the women and girls at risk, that the justice’s call
will be taken up by the authorities,” she
said.
ends