From Op-Ed News: http://www.opednews.com/articles/The-War-on-Women-Continues-by-Elayne-Clift-120530-375.html
By Elayne Clift
May 30, 2012
May 30, 2012
By now you'd have to be living under a rock
not to know that the war on women has escalated and shows no sign of
abating. Maternal health and reproductive rights continue under siege
while overshadowed by the president's public stand on gay rights and the
necessary focus on economic issues. But let's not lose sight of the
fact that in the first three months of 2012 nearly 950 provisions were
introduced targeting women's health services, contraception and
abortion.
To put a human face on it consider this real-life woman
profiled by blogger Peter Daou. Leticia lives in a small Texas town
where her husband works construction. Mother of five, Leticia relied
on the local Planned Parenthood clinic for basic health screening and
free birth control pills until the clinic closed because Republicans in
the state legislature cut the budget for women's health care by
two-thirds. Now Leticia's closest clinic is sixteen miles away and the
waiting list is at least a month long. Like her friend who discovered
a breast lump, she wonders how she will get to the clinic for the care
she needs. These two women have become victims of a war we glibly call
the "war on women" right here in our own country.
But what about
women elsewhere? Sadly, the outlook isn't any better. Activists in
countries as diverse as Turkey, Israel, Romania, Austria and Poland are
alarmed by rising violence, renewed efforts to curtail birth control and
abortion, and reduced access to safe, affordable health care. Last
year, for example, calling it a "lifestyle drug," Slovakia explicitly
banned contraceptive coverage from public health insurance if the
contraception was used solely to prevent pregnancy. (Sound familiar?)
In
an attempt to reveal the "horrifying reality" of El Salvador's ban on
abortion, the Center for Reproductive Rights filed a petition in March
with the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights calling attention to
the "tragic and often fatal consequences" of the ban. According to the
document, women having miscarriages and complicated pregnancies often
suffer arbitrary imprisonment. The petition, filed on behalf of a
33-year old mother convicted of murder during her third difficult
pregnancy, states that "El Salvador's laws have turned emergency rooms
into crime scenes, forcing pregnant women to live under a dark cloud of
suspicion." The young mother profiled in the petition was given a
30-year sentence for miscarrying. Denied a lawyer or an appeal, she was
jailed and treated abusively before being diagnosed with cancer, which
likely caused her pregnancy problems. She died, incarcerated, in 2010.
In
Africa and Asia the war on women and girls is profoundly disturbing,
and goes beyond reproductive rights. Here is just one chilling story,
reported by Peter Daou: "Thirteen year old Aisha was stoned to death
in Somalia by insurgents because she was raped"by three men " When she
reported the crime to authorities they accused her of adultery and
sentenced her to death. Aisha was forced into a hole in a stadium as
50 men buried her up to the neck and cast stones at her till she died."
Continue reading at: http://www.opednews.com/articles/The-War-on-Women-Continues-by-Elayne-Clift-120530-375.html
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