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Integrated Regional Information
Networks (IRIN), May 20, 2005
PAKISTAN: Debating
Islam and Family Planning
ISLAMABAD, 20 May (IRIN) - In a bid to win the
support of religious groups in the country,
Pakistan earlier this month convened a conference
of key religious leaders and scholars from
Islamic communities in 22 countries. The conference
discussed the thorny issue of reducing high
population growth within the framework of Islamic
principles.
Around 90 delegates from almost every school
of Islamic thought participated in the three-day
"International Ulama Conference on Population
and Development" held in the Pakistani
capital, Islamabad from 4-6 May.
"Under three main broad perspectives of
population growth and development, mother and
child health, and gender equity, the idea is
to have experts' views on Islamic teachings
and the key issue of family planning,"
Gohar Ali, director of communications for the
conference, told IRIN in Islamabad.
Pakistan, has an estimated population of 151
million and an annual growth rate of 1.9 percent.
This means the population grows by 2.9 million
every twelve months. Most are condemned to
a life of poverty with over 65 percent of the
population living on or below US $2 per day.
Some progress has been made in population control
in Pakistan. A series of initiatives in the
eighties and nineties has reduced the growth
rate from over 3 percent in 1981 to the current
level.
Even so, since the creation of the state of Pakistan
in 1947, the population has increased nine
fold and is expected to double by 2035 at the
current rate, said Ali.
In Pakistan, the contraceptive usage rate is
considered low at about 34 percent, while the
average fertility rate stands at 4.1 percent,
according to Dr Mehboob Sultan of Islamabad-based
National Institute of Population Studies (NIPS).
Experts are divided on what role religion plays
in low contraceptive use and low take-up of
family planning services in Pakistan.
"A combination of factors like non-availability
of services, baseless traditional beliefs and
misconception play a big role. But, still a
fairly large number of the population believes
the use of artificial contraceptives for family
planning is against nature and also against
Islam," Dr Ansar Ali Khan, an adviser
on reproductive health to the United Nations
Population Fund (UNFPA) in Pakistan, told IRIN
in Islamabad.
In the some attending the conference, Indonesia,
the most populous Muslim nation in the world,
could provide some useful lessons.
"The involvement of Muslim leaders can't
be neglected because they are very important
for the distribution of knowledge to the people,
especially at the grassroots level," said
Dr Tarmizi Taher, rector of the Islamic University
of Indonesia.
Formal approaches adopted by Jakarta to introduce
family planning in the early seventies had
almost completely failed.
"The reason for the failure was because
religious leaders were not involved in the
programme," Indonesian scholar, Muhammad
Nursamad Kamba told the conference. Recognising
this failure, the Indonesian government in
early 90s brought together Islamic scholars
from the renowned Islamic Al-Azhar University,
in Cairo.
"The most important result of the conferences
was that family planning could be carried in
the Muslim world, as long as the method is
not against Islamic teachings," said Taher.
Dr Nabeela Ali from a US-based health research
institute, John Snow Inc, agreed that getting
local religious figures on board was critical
to the success of family planning initiatives.
"Positive supportive role of Ulama [Islamic
clergy]in promoting the health of mothers,
newborns and children, especially in communities
with low literacy levels, is as crucial as
the role of media and health practitioners,"
said Dr Ali.
Nabila Hamza from Tunisia, in her paper 'Gender,
Family Planning and Islam' shared experience
from her country.
"From the beginning of the 1960s, Tunisia
adopted a national population policy, taking
into account mother's health as well as the
social and economic development of the country,"
she told participants of the Islamabad conference.
"Thanks to a series of progressive laws
on birth control promulgated after independence,
it has been possible for women to space out
and limit the number of pregnancies,"
said Hamza.
But some participants were unsure whether consulting
ancient Islamic teachings on the issue was
useful.
"Population growth has not been a problem
in the early and medieval Islamic period and
hence no clear-cut answer can be found from
historic sources," said Dr Qibla Ayaz,
head of the Islamic studies department at Pakistan's
Peshawar University. He addressed the conference
on 'alternative Islamic strategies' for regulating
population.
"The issue needs to be seriously discussed
and debated by social scientists, intellectuals
and ulama before a collective Islamic strategy
to the question of population regulating is
evolved," said Ayaz.
UNFPA said the meeting had been incredibly useful.
"Such conferences are a right step in a
right direction to have the religious from
across different cultures to discuss the issue
and share experiences and then ultimately educating
masses - 'religion does not forbid the use
of contraceptives'," said UNFPA adviser,
Dr Ansar Ali Khan.
<< IRIN -- 5/20/05 >>
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