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Inter Press News Service, November
20, 2005
'Church, a Goliath
Against Reproductive Health'
Author : Johanna Son
KUALA LUMPUR , Nov 20 (IPS) - When Philippine
President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo told the
U.N. General Assembly recently to "respect
the deep Catholicism of the Filipino people"
and said that natural family planning is more
effective than artificial means like condoms,
Filipino activists reacted with disbelief,
others with anger.
That disbelief and anger was still visible at
the just-finished 3rd Asia-Pacific Conference
on Reproductive Health and Sexuality here,
where the role of religion--how it hinders
or helps reproductive health--came up repeatedly.
Arroyos statement was perceived to be part
of a quid pro quo with the powerful Catholic
bishops in her South-east Asian country, whom
she had met before she left for the United
Nations and who have heretofore withheld open
criticism of her embattled presidency and impeachment
proceedings against her.
But deal or not, the Church in the Philippines--
where more than 85 percent of people are Catholic--
has always wielded clout on issues like the
promotion and use of condoms or the legalisation
of divorce. Politicians tend to be wary of
going against its edicts, for fear of losing
votes.
The countrys annual population growth is
two percent--compared to Indias 1.7 percent
and Thailands 1.3 percent. The Philippines
fertility rate stands at 3.64 percent. There
are more than 470,000 illegal, induced abortions
each year, nearly 80,000 of which resulted
in complications leading to hospitalisation.
"The governments bending to the policies
of the Church", is a key force that is
setting back reproductive and sexual health
in the country, Rhodora Roy-Raterta, executive
director of the Family Planning Organisation
of the Philippines, told the Nov. 17-20 conference.
"Public policy on family planning choice
is also seen as a moral issue, which has drawn
the Catholic hierarchy," she said, calling
the institution a Goliath in the battle for
better reproductive health.
The Church sees the use of condoms as promoting
adultery and Catholic leaders maintain that
sex is meant for procreation, so that the use
of condoms -- even for HIV/AIDS prevention--
becomes immoral.
Catholic schools in the Philippines can only
talk about natural family planning methods,
such as abstinence and withdrawal, and not
artificial ones like using condoms,
just as hospitals run by or linked to Catholic
orders do not perform tubal ligation of women
who wish to stop getting pregnant.
To family planning groups as well as activists,
Arroyos statement at the U.N. also eroded
the countrys commitment to provide universal
access to reproductive and sexual health under
the 1994 International Conference on Population
and Development (ICPD) in Cairo.
But well beyond the sphere of formal documents,
her statement underlines how the policies of
a country can change -- or not change --due
to the Churchs lobbying with presidents
and its hold on individual attitudes.
For campaigners, it also marks the retrogression
of reproductive health policies at a time when
conservative forces like the U.S. government--
formerly a key funder of family planning programmes
in the Philippines-- have already undercut
such schemes in the country.
Donations by the U.S. Agency for International
Development (USAID) of contraceptive devices
will end by 2007, under the Bush administrations
policies against funding schemes that push
"abortions as a method of family planning".
This had earlier already prompted the Philippine
government to adopt a self-reliant policy on
contraceptive supply.
This raises other worries, because Arroyos
latest statement-- a signal from the highest
political level-- means even more difficult
sailing for a reproductive health bill that,
because of its sensitivity with Church and
conservative groups, was already stuck in the
legislative mill.
Raterte also cites other signs of conservative
trends, such as attempts to de-list the approval
for use of intrauterine devices as well as
a bill to ban the use of all artificial family
planning methods.
Family planning policy has changed over the years
with incumbent presidents, but always in the
shadow of the Catholic Church -- a Church that
has made and unmade presidents in the last
two decades.
Former President, Corazon Aquino, whose assumption
of the presidency during the 1986 People
Power uprising was backed by the late
Manila archbishop, Jaime Cardinal Sin, studiously
supported the Church position against artificial
methods of family planning.
Her successor Fidel Ramos, a Protestant president,
ushered in a more liberal policy. But subsequent
administrations have adhered to the usual Church
position.
Juan Romeo Nereus Acosta, a congressman from
the Philippines, told the Kuala Lumpur meeting
that surveys show that 87 percent of Filipinos
legislators favour local structures to provide
reproductive health information and services,
especially to the poor. Eighty four percent
agree that population policy should be seen
in the context of human development, he added.
"They are fine when it comes to these motherhood
statements," explained Acosta, a member
of the Philippine legislators group on
population and development.
Raterte said that while the leaders of different
faiths will try to see to it that their congregations
follow their views, "governments and public
officials need to see outside this box"
and not adhere to the beliefs of one religion,
especially since there is a constitutional
separation of Church and state in the Philippines.
To medical anthropologist and University of the
Philippines professor Michael Tan, there is
also a tough political lesson from Arroyos
open support of Church policies on family planning:
having a woman as president does not mean her
advocacy of women-empowering policies.
"Sadly, it was under two women presidents
where family planning and reproductive health
programmes have regressed, including the current
one," he pointed out. "It reminds
us that women can become captives of the gender
ideology and carry it as they become head of
state, said Tan.
<< Inter Press Service -- 11/20/05 >>
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