Tag: Abortion law

  • How Ghanaian female students use metal clothes hangers for abortion – Ghana News

    How Ghanaian female students use metal clothes hangers for abortion – Ghana News


    Clothes hangers have now become tools for abortion by some young girls.

    Per reports, the hangers are used in some senior high schools, particularly by the ladies for flogging their junior colleagues and also for abortion.

    A post on social media detailing how such a dangerous act is carried out says the ladies will put the hanger in fire to become very hot and then insert it into their vagina.

    It is perceived that the hot metal will kill the developing foetus and subsequently come out in a form of blood.

    The dangerous thing is that this method of abortion mostly has serious side effects. Sometimes the metal damages their womb, cause severe infections and others also die due to excessive bleeding.

    Read the full narration below;
    This hanger is used for flögging and abortion. In boarding schools, it’s called “GO TO HELL”

    This hanger is used to brutalize junior students whether they do good or bâd. The pain alone is out of this world.

    When they want to use it for ABORTION, they use a lighter or go to the kitchen to sterilize it with fire.

    This hanger will be twisted in such a way that it’s straightened and the hook is on the tip then they pass it through f!re making sure it’s hot and red.

    They insert in the vâginâ and twist, sometimes they twist and pull out the fôetus and k!ll it. when the hanger is removed, they will sit on a bucket till the flow subsides. Junior students will be asked to clean up the mess.

    If the bleeding is too much, all the junior students will be forced to give out their pads.

    This happens mostly in boarding schools, even in our university days. I used to hear about it. I never lived in the hostel, those in the hostel whom they saw as most righteous beings were busy using hanger to k!ll their babies.

    Some of them d!e due to excessive bleeding. While some dâmâge their womb which will cause their womb to be removed.

    Later, they will tell us to forget the past.
    I’m sorry, I won’t let any bloød relative of mine end up with someone like you.

    Parents, please always be on the look out for your teenage girls. Boarding school has ru!ned most of them.

    Source: Ghanaweb

  • All women have the right to abortion, the highest court in India has ruled

    In India, women are permitted to have abortions up until the 24th week of their pregnancies.

    India’s Supreme Court on Thursday removed restrictions on people who seek to terminate pregnancies outside of marriage.

    “The decision to have or not to have an abortion is borne out of complicated life circumstances, which only the woman can choose on her own terms without external interference or influence,” the court ruling said.

    The top court asserted that women should have the “reproductive autonomy” to seek abortions without consulting a third party.

    Thursday’s decision was an extension of a ruling in a case in which an unmarried woman in a consensual relationship complained that she was denied an abortion.

    The 25-year-old plaintiff was past 20 weeks in her pregnancy. The Supreme Court allowed her to terminate the pregnancy up to her 24th week.

    Abortion in India 

    Since 1971, India’s Medical Termination of Pregnancy (MTP) Act had limited abortion rights to married women, divorcees, widows, minors, “disabled and mentally ill women,” and survivors of sexual assault or rape.

    Spousal rape had not been considered legal grounds for termination until Thursday’s ruling.

    According to a 2017 study by the Ipas Development Foundation, about 6.4 million abortions are carried out annually in India.

    Over half of this number is believed to be unsafe abortions as poverty forces women to resort to illicit back-street operators or self-medication.

  • Roe v Wade: Inside an Arkansas abortion clinic on its last day

    There was a palpable change in the atmosphere at an abortion clinic in Little Rock, Arkansas the morning the Supreme Court overturned Roe v Wade.

    That was the moment everything turned upside down.

    The doors at the end of the hallway that leads to the patient area were instantly shut – behind them, you could hear the sound of sobs.

    The BBC has spent the last three weeks at the clinic, Little Rock Family Planning Services, interviewing the staff and patients who come through its doors. Usually, we’ve been greeted with joyful hellos.

    But when the decision came down, we were asked to leave immediately so they could have time alone to process.

    The escorts at the clinic, who have stood in the Arkansas heat day in and day out to accompany patients through the throng of anti-abortion protesters who often gather outside, held a group hug.

    “I thought that this country would still care about people. Would still care about women,” said Miss Karen, the lead escort.

    Outside, anti-abortion protesters celebrated, but said there was more that needed to change.

    “It will be a day of celebration, but we will not fully celebrate until abortion is eradicated from our land,” Hoyt Plunkett told the BBC.

    “You are on notice!” shouted another protester, at people still parking their cars at the clinic. They hadn’t heard about the decision yet.

    “My suggestion is for you to turn around and leave this place of sin, this place of inequity, this evil place,” the protester said.

    Escorts hug staff on the last day of Little Rock Family Planning Services

    Across America, clinics like the one in Little Rock are shutting their doors, presumably for the last time. Arkansas, along with 12 other states in the US, has a so-called “trigger” law banning abortion should Roe v Wade be overturned. When the Supreme Court issued their decision on Friday morning, giving states the authority to restrict abortion, these trigger laws began to come into force.

    While some states, like Texas, had written waiting periods into the law, delaying the inevitable, Arkansas had written its trigger law to come into force as soon as the state’s attorney general – its top lawyer – certified that the Supreme Court gave them the power to do so.

    Leslie Rutledge, Arkansas’ Republican attorney general, told the BBC she supported the trigger law and the Supreme Court’s decision.

    “I think many of us didn’t think it would perhaps ever happen in our lifetimes,” she said.

    Abortion is only legal to save the life of the mother – there are no exceptions for rape or incest.

    “This is an innocent life that we’re talking about. And that innocent life that begins at conception,” Ms Rutledge said.

    “(Just) because it was formed under evil circumstances doesn’t make that innocent child evil.”

    Now, people in Arkansas who are facing an unwanted pregnancy have fewer options. They can go out of state to have an abortion—the closest clinic in a state that allows abortion is 5 hours away—or they can decide to keep their child.

    The state has no paid family leave, and Medicaid – publicly funded health insurance – only covers low-income mothers for 60 days after they give birth.

    Ms Rutledge said the government of Arkansas has “always been there to support those mothers”, but that they “always need to look for more ways to provide for parents who want to be loving parents, and to make sure that we take care of those children”.

    Jenifer Thompson
    Jenifer Thompson, a patient and then an employee, says the clinic saved her life

    The staff at Little Rock Family Planning spent the morning calling patients to cancel appointments and help them rebook in different states..

    Ashli Hunt, a registered nurse, broke down in tears this morning and immediately had to run outside to catch her breath.

    “No matter how hard we prepare for bad news, when it finally hits, it hits HARD. Having to call these patients and tell them Roe V Wade was overturned is heart-breaking,” she said a few hours later, after she had time to process the news.

    She’s worked at the clinic for 14 years. Ashli said she’s heartbroken for the patients who are losing their choice, but also that for herself.

    “Not only are they taking the choice, away from women, but they’re taking what I feel like I should be doing away from me,” she said. “You know what my choice is included in that.”

    Jenifer Thompson, who first came here as a patient over a decade ago before becoming a member of staff, said the clinic helped save her life.

    She said that after getting an abortion here, and help getting contraception, she was so impressed by the care they offered that she began to volunteer. She eventually became a paid staff member, and got her nursing degree. Struggles with alcohol led to her getting fired, but she said “the best boss in the world” gave her a second chance by re-hiring her after she began recovery.

    Pro-choice protesters outside Arkansas state house
    Pro-choice protesters outside Arkansas state house

    Now, she says she is devastated she will no longer be able to help women as she was once helped.

    I have to tell them, I’m sorry, but there’s nothing I can do for you. I’m sorry that your boyfriend beats you every day, and that he rapes you all the time, you’re gonna have to find somewhere else to go,” she said.

    “I mean, I can give them information to help try, but it’s heart-breaking man, like, you know, this place saved my life literally, multiple times.”

    Later Friday evening, about 1,000 protesters gathered outside the state house, mostly to condemn the Supreme Court’s decision.

    One of the clinic’s escorts was there.

    “Today we mourn. Tomorrow we fight,” she said.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • Roe v Wade: US Supreme Court strikes down abortion rights

    Millions of women in the US will lose the legal right to abortion, after the Supreme Court overturned a 50-year-old ruling that legalised it nationwide.

    The court struck down the landmark Roe v Wade decision, weeks after an unprecedented leaked document suggested it favoured doing so.

    The judgement will transform abortion rights in America, with individual states now able to ban the procedure.

    Half of US states are expected to introduce new restrictions or bans.

    Thirteen have already passed so-called trigger laws that will automatically outlaw abortion following the Supreme Court’s ruling. A number of others are likely to pass new restrictions quickly.

    In total, abortion access is expected to be cut off for about 36 million women of reproductive age, according to research from Planned Parenthood, a healthcare organisation that provides abortions.

    The Supreme Court had been considering a case, Dobbs v Jackson Women’s Health Organization, that challenged Mississippi’s ban on abortion after 15 weeks.

    But the court ruled in favour of the state by a majority vote of six to three, effectively ending the constitutional right to an abortion.

    Democratic governors of several states including California, New Mexico and Michigan have already announced plans to enshrine abortion rights within their constitutions if Roe v Wade is overturned.

    The landmark 1973 Roe v Wade case saw the Supreme Court rule by a vote of seven to two that a woman’s right to terminate her pregnancy was protected by the US constitution.

    The ruling gave American women an absolute right to an abortion in the first three months (trimester) of pregnancy, but allowed for restrictions in the second trimester and for prohibitions in the third.

    But in the decades since, anti-abortion rulings have gradually pared back access in more than a dozen states.

    Source: BBC
  • Germany moves to reform abortion law

    The government is following through on its pledge to decriminalize abortion.

    Officials plan to abolish a law that subjects doctors who publish information on abortion procedures to prosecution.

    Pro abortion protesters in Munich, GermanyWomen in Germany have been protesting for abortion to be decriminalized

    “I really struggled to find information online,” said Verena, who was 22 when she found herself dealing with an unwanted pregnancy. “There was no easy way to find out which doctors perform abortions, where they are or how the procedure is performed.”

    Abortion is illegal in Germany and punishable by up to three years in prison. But the women and their doctors do not face penalties if the pregnancy poses a health risk to the woman or in cases of rape. Otherwise, an abortion may be carried out within the first 12 weeks of pregnancy (14 weeks since the last period) after mandatory counseling. However, many barriers remain.

    One of the biggest hurdles to obtaining an abortion in Germany was paragraph 219a of the criminal code, which has its origins in Nazi-era social policy. It stated that anyone who publicly “offers, announces [or] advertises” abortion services can face penalties of up to two years’ imprisonment or a fine.

    Kristina Hänel sits at a deskGynecologist Kristina Hänel was found guilty of ‘advertising’ abortions under §219a

    Although a reform three years ago allowed doctors to state that they perform the procedure on their websites, they were still banned from giving medical detail.

    But on Friday, Germany’s coalition government of the center-left Social Democrats and Greens and neoliberal Free Democrats pushed the motion to scrap 219a through parliament.

    Under 219a, Kristina Hänel, a gynecologist in the western German city of Giessen who has performed abortions for 30 years, was sentenced in 2017 to pay a fine of €6,000 ($6,926) for offering abortion services on her website. The case triggered a heated debate in the country.

    “If 219a is scrapped now, Germany takes a step in the right direction of providing information for patients,” Hänel told DW ahead of the decision.

    Woman holding abortion pill in her handAbortions don’t have to involve surgery — many can be done with medication

    Five years ago, Verena found that the lack of readily available information meant hours of fruitless searching before calling a local clinic, where she was cryptically told to get in touch with one of three doctors in her area. But then she found there was no way to get information such as: are these doctors well-rated by fellow patients? What is the difference between a medical and surgical abortion? What is the after-care process like, and what are the possible side effects?

    “When you Google abortion, you’re taken to websites that warn you you’ll definitely be depressed, traumatized and infertile. That isn’t medical advice — it just makes you feel like the worst person in the world,” she said, emphasizing the emotional toll of seeking even the most basic information.

    A young woman with dark shoulder length hair and a bleached streak in it sits on a grassy field, smilingVerena said she had no idea about the many hurdles to abortion until she sought one herself

    Jana Maeffert, a gynecologist with the reproductive rights organization Doctors for Choice Germany, said the dearth of information could create dire circumstances for patients, who may find out too late that a clinic doesn’t offer what they are looking for. For example, doctors cannot state on their website “whether they offer medical or surgical abortions or both. They can’t say that you only operate until the 10th week of pregnancy, so a woman might drive all the way to your practice only to find out she cannot obtain an abortion there anymore,” because she has already passed that point in her pregnancy.

    Jana Maeffert types on a computerJana Maeffert is a gynecologist with a reproductive rights organization

    Less access to abortion

    To perform an abortion, the doctor needs to see a certificate proving that the pregnant woman has undergone counseling at least three days prior in a state-approved counseling center. There are numerous organizations offering counseling, during which the woman is informed of her options, where she might find additional psychological and financial help if she decides to have the baby or how to go about adoption.

    Verena said getting an appointment for the mandatory counseling was nearly impossible. She recalled making call after call. This can turn out to be so time-consuming that it risks taking the pregnant woman over the line of her first trimester.

    Finding a counseling appointment and a doctor is far from a given for many German women. Since 2003, the number of doctors willing to perform an abortion in Germany has tumbled by 40% — there are now only 1,200 practices in the country where a woman can legally obtain one, down from 2,000 some 20 years ago.

    “In Germany, abortion is a taboo topic. For patients, and for doctors, too,” said Maeffert. “If you practice medicine in a small town, you may well decide not to offer pregnancy termination because then you’re labeled the ‘abortion doctor’ in your small community.”

    “Only one in 10 gynecologists in Germany performs abortions,” Maeffert said, “not necessarily because they’re against it, but because the barriers are so high.”

    Some patients, Maeffert said, “must travel 150 kilometers” (90 miles) to find a doctor, especially in rural and Catholic regions such as Bavaria. But, even in some major cities, the situation is critical. According to local media reports, in Stuttgart, not a single hospital offers abortions. In the city of Münster, the last doctor who offered pregnancy termination went into retirement in 2019.

    Abortion rates at 25-year low

    As the number of practices providing legal abortions has dwindled, fewer and fewer women have gotten one. The year 2021 saw the lowest rate of abortions in Germany since 1996, the first year statistics were collected on the subject. According to the Federal Statistical Office, some 94,000 abortions were carried out in 2021, a decrease in 5.4% on the previous year and part of a decadelong downward trend.

    Meanwhile, doctors who perform abortions in Germany have begun to face the onslaught of active anti-choice activists who protest outside clinics, hold marches across major cities, send hate mail and take to social media with aggressive comments.

    Maeffert, in Berlin, said she herself had not yet experienced such attacks. “But, for example, in parts of Bavaria … protesters stand in front of the clinic all the time. … It’s horrible for the patients and the doctors,” she said.

    Political will for change

    Some medical students have taken matters into their own hands, and have found creative ways to get the relevant training on how to perform the procedure. The so-called “Papaya Workshops,” for example, use the fruit as a model for the female reproductive system.

    While attending such a workshop is not sufficient for a doctor to be certified to perform surgical abortions, it closes a gap in German medical education, where students say that abortion is “discussed for 10 minutes, if at all,” according to the advocacy group Medical Students for Choice.

    According to Berlin’s public broadcaster, rbb, the workshops are fully booked. One participant told rbb that she felt the workshop had given her “a better idea of how the procedure goes, what tools you use. I had imagined it as being a lot harder. I’m not so scared of it now.”

    Some doctors in Germany are also now prescribing the pills needed for medical abortion in a telemedicine project where the pregnant person takes medications at home under supervision by a doctor to induce a miscarriage and negate the need for surgery. This is not to be confused with the morning-after pill, which has been freely available in Germany since 2015.

    Source: DW