Kenya has banned the international charity Marie Stopes from offering abortion services to women and girls after complaints it was promoting the termination of unwanted pregnancies, the government and charity officials are quoted in an IoL report as saying. Abortions are not permitted in Kenya unless a woman's life or health is in danger and emergency treatment is required.
The Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentists Board (KMPDB) said it had acted after the public, pro-life campaigners and the Kenya Film Classification Board complained that Marie Stopes radio adverts promoted abortions – a claim the charity denies. "Marie Stopes Kenya is hereby directed to immediately cease and desist offering any form of abortion services in all its facilities within the Republic of Kenya," KMPDB said in a letter to Marie Stopes country director Dana Tilson.
The report says the charity – which provides family planning, counselling, emergency abortions and post-abortion care to thousands of women and girls – said its campaign promoted awareness about unsafe abortions. "At no point did we promote abortions," marketing director Christopher Wainaina is quoted as saying. "Our media campaign talks about the legal status of abortion in Kenya, the stigma of abortion that exists and how it is leading to high numbers of women becoming victims of botched backstreet abortions and dying as a result."
The report says, according to a health ministry report, almost half a million abortions were conducted in Kenya in 2012 – mostly in backstreet clinics – with one in four women and girls suffering complications such as high fever, sepsis, shock and organ failure, said a February health ministry report. An estimated 266 women die per 100,000 unsafe abortions in Kenya – higher than rates estimated in other east African nations, it added.
Campaigners warned that the ban on Marie Stopes could hit victims of backstreet abortions who desperately need emergency treatment. "There aren't many places for women to go in that situation – many would rather die than go to a government hospital because of the stigma and discrimination they face," said Evelyne Opondo, Africa Director for the Centre for Reproductive Rights. "I think many girls and women could lose their lives due to this ban. Those who do not lose their lives may end up with life-long disabilities due to no proper treatment."
The report says government hospitals are the main provider of safe abortions, but are often overstretched. Campaigners said authorities, influenced by powerful Christian organisations, were making it harder for women to access safe abortions. Since 2010, the ministry of health has withdrawn essential guidelines on conducting safe abortions and banned health workers from training on abortion.
The report says the KMPDB also reprimanded the charity for contravening advertising rules for medical practitioners, and ordered it to file weekly reports on all services provided in its 23 clinics across the country for the next 60 days.
Wainaina said Marie Stopes – which has operated in Kenya for over three decades – was working with the KMPDB and the ministry of health to seek clarity on the issues raised in the letter and hoped to find a resolution soon.
The report says this is not the first time Marie Stopes – which works in 37 countries in Africa, Asia, Europe, South America as well as the US – has faced a suspension. A British watchdog in 2016 suspended the charity from performing abortions on under-18s and vulnerable women, and suspended abortions under general anaesthetic after raising concerns over patient care.
[link url="https://www.iol.co.za/news/africa/kenya-bans-charity-marie-stopes-from-providing-abortion-services-18183077"]IoL report[/link]