‘Discriminatory’ abortion laws challenged

The women’s rights group said of concern was that the Act excludes pregnancies of minor girls conceived as a result of marital rape by older spouses.

The Women and Law in Southern Africa (WLSA) has approached the High Court challenging the constitutional validity of some sections of the Termination of Pregnancy Act.

The women’s rights group said of concern was that the Act excludes pregnancies of minor girls conceived as a result of marital rape by older spouses.

According to WLSA, the application is particularly important in light of the many cases of teenage pregnancies, illegal teen abortions and teenage mortalities.

“More than that, the application, takes into account the fact that marital rape having been criminalised, victims of marital rape should also have access to legal abortion,” read part of the application filed by WLSA lawyer Tendai Biti.

“The applicants will seek to persuade the court that this application is a logical sequel to the protection of children that the court has offered and granted in the child marriage case.”

Illegal abortion carries a penalty of up to five years imprisonment and/or a fine. Under Zimbabwe's 1977 Termination of Pregnancy Act, abortion is only legally permitted under certain circumstances.

Abortion is legally permitted in the country only under limited circumstances, including if the pregnant woman’s life is in danger or in cases of rape, incest or foetal impairment.

If conducted illegally, it carries a penalty of up to five years in jail and/or a fine.

However, because of tough laws pregnant women always turn to backyard abortion facilities run by unlicensed midwives and deregistered medical practitioners.

“This is an important constitutional application in respect of which the applicants seek to persuade the court to outlaw or read in to the definition of 'unlawful intercourse contained in section 2(1) of the Termination of Pregnancy Act [Chapter 15:10] (hereinafter referred to as the ‘Act’) so as to allow children below the age of 18 and married women, who are victims of marital rape, to have access to legal abortion as provided for in terms of Section 4 of the Act,” WLSA argued.

According to a survey of conducted by a local journal, PLOS ONE, one in 10 women who undergo abortions in Zimbabwe experience complications, including hemorrhaging or infection, with some even dying in the process.

 

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