Law widens scope where abortion is allowed
Updated 15 hr(s) 41 min(s) ago
By Lucianne Limo
An African woman can procure an abortion when pregnancy results from rape, incest or when her life is in danger.
The
Protocol on the Rights of Women in Africa (Prowa) explicitly sets forth
the reproductive right of women to procure medical abortion.
And
the international law, which Kenya has ratified, goes further than the
Constitution in the controversial matter. It asks State parties to
authorise medical abortion in case of rape, incest, sexual assault or
where the pregnancy endangers the life of mother or foetus.
Kenya’s Constitution only allows abortion if the life of the mother is in danger.
Prowa
is renowned for its strong and comprehensive provisions on women’s
rights. In another first, the protocol calls for the legal prohibition
of female genital mutilation. It also specifies 18 years as the minimum
age for marriage and promotes equal representation of women in the
Judiciary and law enforcement as well as at all levels of
decision-making.
The
African Union adopted the protocol to the African Charter on the rights
of women in July 11, 2003. Kenya joined 31 other African countries that
have ratified the protocol on October 6, last year.
On
Monday night, the Vice-Chairperson of the Commission on the
Implementation of the Constitution, Elizabeth Muli, launched a manual to
guide activists and lawyers on how to use the provisions in protocol to
litigate on behalf of aggrieved women.
She
said the manual provides an analysis of case laws on women’s rights
decided by other regional and international bodies which can be used to
guide courts in interpretation of women rights as provided in the
protocol.
“The
protocol is important as the Constitution provides that any treaty
ratified by Kenya shall form part of the laws of Kenya,” Muli added.
The
protocol asks governments to ensure women enjoy their right to decide
whether to have children, how many and their spacing. It also gives
women the right to know the health status of their partners.
The
law also says women and men shall have a right to inherit, in equitable
shares, their parents’ properties. The guide was released by an
international human rights organisation, Equality Now, in conjunction
with Solidarity for African Women’s Rights. The release of the manual
comes eight years after the protocol came into force.
“We
hope African lawyers and women’s rights advocates find the manual
useful, and it gives them hands-on guidance on how best to apply the
remarkable standards of the protocol in cases of violations of women’s
rights,” said Faiza Jama Mohamed, the Nairobi Office director of
equality.
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