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26 March 2009 Forward Magazine -- Although
relatively widespread in Syria, abortion remains an
unspoken secret, brushed under the rug by a
conservative society. People prefer neither to
acknowledge nor talk about it, acting as if by turning
a blind eye, the debate on abortion will simply go
away.
Reality, however, is very different. A husband came to
me, aged 50, with his wife, who was 41," said one
pharmacist in Aleppo. "They had a family of 10, and
their economic conditions were really bad. He asked
for abortion pills, saying that his wife was pregnant
– by accident – and that they both did not want
another child. I told him that as a pharmacist, I
couldn't give abortion pills except by medical
prescription. He begged me, citing his financial
difficulties, so I promised to help, calling up a
friend who was a doctor. It cost them 400 SP ($8) to
get rid of the baby, although she would have paid no
less than 5,000 SP ($100) at a doctor's office."
According to recent medical studies, there are 64
million cases of abortion annually in the Arab world,
with a total of 126,000 abortions carried out in the
region on a daily basis, 60% of which are conducted on
Arab teenage girls. According to the World Health
Organization (WHO), a total of 78,000 women die
annually from unsafe abortion, and its repercussions,
with approximately 20 million unsafe abortion
operations taking place annually.
Frowned upon by society, prohibited in some religions,
costly, and difficult to legally justify completely,
abortion operations in the Arab world often take place
behind closed doors, in complete secrecy. Forward
Magazine spoke to several hospitals, both private and
public, in different cities across Syria, and all of
them had one uniform answer, "we only carry out
abortions when either the women's life, or that of the
fetus, is in danger." Many hinted, however, to the
abortion black market in Syria, pointing out that
perhaps we should be looking there to find better
answers.
Jihan, a woman who describes herself as "mature and
educated," went through an unsafe abortion operation.
"It was at my own decision," she noted. "My daughter
was only two years old, and I
was told I could not carry another baby while breast
feeding." The first doctor refused to carry out the
abortion, she added, forcing her to go to an
"under-the-table" abortion doctor, "who did not
even ask me any questions, only set a date for the
operation." On the day of the operation, "I went to
the clinic with my husband, and a man came up to us on
bicycle, saying that he was the
anesthesiologist, " Jihan explains. "He did not ask
for any blood tests, and there was no oxygen supply in
the clinic. I was not sure of how sterile the
equipment was. Had I been in a different state of
mind, I would not have continued."
Murder, scandal or women's rights?
Most countries in the region, Syria included, do not
allow abortion. "Syria stands out with laws that deter
citizens from seeking abortion, and harsh punishment
for those who facilitate or commit
abortion," Fouad Awad, an attorney specialized in
criminal law, said. "The law punishes women who commit
abortion with jail terms that vary from six months to
three years, and any person who facilitates abortion
is punished with a prison term that varies between one
to three years. If abortion leads to death of the
woman, punishment becomes hard labor for four to seven
years."
Most black market abortions happen in so-called "Women
Clinics" or among "qabila" (unlicensed midwifes).
Those who do perform these illegal operations, justify
their action saying that they do it to
protect Oriental women from a social scandal, which
might lead to her death.
Buthaina Khalil, director of the regional office of
the Family Protection Association, was more concerned
about the psychological, economic, and health hazards
of abortion in such unsolicited and un-safe
environments. "Whether miscarriage is accidental or
provoked, repercussions are the same," she said. "A
woman falls under immense psychological pressure, and
whatever future problem she faces, would get
attributed to the abortion. If society found out, she
would be seen as someone who has broken social norms.
Economically, she often sells her belongings to pay
for the abortion, or borrows money for the operation."
Denying women abortions, though, leads to other
undesirable results. "The case is more severe if a
woman has been raped and needs to get rid of the fetus
immediately. She hides her secret from everybody, her
husband included, and resorts to primitive ways to get
rid of the baby," says Khalil. "Consuming a large
amount of pills, black tea, or boiled water with
aspirin. She might resort to burning Sodium,
aggressive massage of the belly, or the ever-lasting
technique: lifting heavy material during pregnancy, to
forcefully terminate the fetus."
With such extreme measures taken, some have taken the
view of Nadim Abu Halaweh, a social scientist, who
said, "Abortion is a human right, especially when the
baby is conceived out of wedlock." The severe health
hazards that women put themselves through to avoid
banishment from society definitely gives pause when
thinking of forbidding it outright.
Religion, liberalism and baby ghosts
For many Christians, the 5th Commandment is loud and
crystal clear: "Thou shall not kill." The bible
reminds us on every occasion that God is master of
life, and while some believe that life begins at
birth, others feel that it begins at conception,
making provoked abortion a deliberate and direct
murder that is prohibited.
In Islam, scholars have also agreed that abortion is a
red-line, some feeling that it is only admissible
within the first forty days of pregnancy, others only
if pregnancy will affect the life of the mother.
Between conservative and liberal Syrians, a lot is
happening. Some resort to abortion to run away from
shame, others to continue their lives without an
unwanted child standing in the way.
"The problem is that when a woman seeks abortion, she
does not think of the future, only her present
condition," Suha, an artist who has had two abortions
when she was young, says. "I wanted to study. My
mother supported and helped me get an abortion. They
told me that the operation was safe and the doctor was
well-known." Later, though, she would go through
overweighing psychological trauma, seeing herself
chased by ghosts for some time, while having to live
with a husband who
stopped talking to her in his rage at her killing the
child. |