Allah yang dipercayai orang Islam tipikal sebagai pencipta  itu
ternyata goblok juga: bikin apa-apa salah design melulu.

Untuk melahirkan saja perempuan bukan saja kudu menanggungkan rasa
sakit, tapi juga menghadapi resiko bisa mati...

(Sekalian penghargaan kudu diberikan kepada ibu-ibu kita...)

Apa ada orang Islam tipikal yang berniat untuk menyeret Allah yang
mereka percayai itu ke depan pengadilan dengan tuduhan telah salah
design dan membahayakan nyawa perempuan?

---------


Why women still die to give birth 
By Stephanie Holmes 
BBC News  


Giving birth can be fatal for women in many countries of the world. 

Around half a million women die annually before, during or shortly
after giving birth - and almost all of these deaths occur in
developing countries. 


Campaigners argue that these deaths are both preventable and have
repercussions that echo far beyond the woman's immediate family and
community. 

"We know exactly what needs to be done to save women's lives," the
chief of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) Thoraya Obaid told
the BBC News website. 

And yet, since 1990, the level of maternal mortality has decreased by
less than 1% per year, far from enough to reach an internationally
agreed goal of a 75% reduction by 2015. 

The leading killers during pregnancy or childbirth include massive
blood loss, high blood pressure, an unsafe abortion, an untreated
infection and obstructed labour - where the woman's body is too small
for the baby to pass through the birth canal. 

But the reasons why these issues have not been tackled are political,
rather than medical. 

Marginalised 

"The first and most important reason is a social issue: the low status
of women. Leaders do not see the lives and health of women as a
political priority, they invest in other sectors," Mrs Obaid said. 

Women most at risk are often the most marginalised and vulnerable,
living in countries with undeveloped health systems or in conflict
situations, she added. 


 MATERNAL MORTALITY 
The number of women dying in childbirth varies dramatically worldwide
from one in eight in Afghanistan and Sierra Leone to one in 47,000 in
Ireland 
Maternal health is strongly linked to access to safe abortion,
contraception and emergency obstetric care 
If a mother is ill or dies, the baby is less likely to survive and her
other children less likely to be healthy and educated 
 

Half of all maternal deaths - some 270,000 in 2005 - occur in
sub-Saharan Africa, where one in two women lacks access to a trained
midwife. 

"The three basic interventions are: family planning to begin with, a
qualified birth attendant present at the birth and access to obstetric
care if there are complications during birth," she said. 

While many countries have made little progress, a few have scored
startling successes. 

Sri Lanka, for example, has managed to halve its maternal death rates
every 12 years and South Africa reduced its level by 92% in a decade,
according to non-governmental organisation Population Action
International (PAI). 

Yet, in most cases, reproductive health has slipped into the shadows,
eclipsed by the more perplexing and dramatic threat of HIV/Aids. 

"There are competing demands on donors' money and the rise of HIV/Aids
has taken a great deal away," Mrs Obaid said. 

"Despite the fact that HIV is a sexually transmitted virus there was a
divorce between HIV and reproductive health," she said, adding that
approaches tackled one issue or the other, rather than seeing them as
linked. 

Matters of faith 

Another obstacle to reducing levels of maternal mortality has,
arguably, been the increasing influence of ideology and faith on
health policy, particularly in the US. 


Since 2002, the US has withheld funding from the UNFPA, accusing it of
actively promoting abortion or sterilisation. 

"The words 'sexual' and 'reproductive' are seen by one of our major
donors - the US - as being a euphemism for backing abortion," Mrs
Obaid said. 

She said the UNFPA neither supported or opposed abortion, but brushed
off the impact of the loss of funding, saying the shortfall had been
more than compensated for by increased contributions from Europe. 


 The worse thing for countries that don't have basic healthcare is to
allow abortion. Making it legal won't make it safe 
Wendy Wright, Concerned Women for America  

But others argue that the US position has nonetheless been damaging. 

"It's outrageous," Amy Coen, the head of PAI told the BBC News website. 

"I think the US's restrictive policies have absolutely been one of the
reasons that there has not been as much progress as there could be in
developing countries." 

Out of focus 

The White House argues that the funds diverted from the UNFPA have
gone to support other reproductive rights projects, run by
organisations that steer clear of abortion. 

And Concerned Women for America - one of the organisations which
successfully lobbied against US funding for UNFPA - said that to
support the body would be a violation of US law. 

"Our cash dollars cannot go to organisations that advocate coercive or
forced abortions," the group's president, Wendy Wright, told the BBC
news website, linking the UNFPA to the practice of forced abortion in
China. 

She said the UNFPA provided resources to Chinese government family
planning agencies, even if it was not directly involved. 

"One reason why there's not been a big drop in maternal deaths is that
there has been too much of a focus on abortion rather than what
works," she said. 

Some 70,000 women die from unsafe abortion each year. 

But making abortion more easily available, Mrs Wright argues, will not
reduce maternal deaths in developing countries. 

"The worse thing for countries that don't have basic healthcare is to
allow abortion because they also lack penicillin and clean water.
Making it legal won't make it safe," Mrs Wright said. 

Yet, according to a recent report by Population Action International,
18 of the 26 countries with the highest risk of maternal mortality
also have highly restrictive abortion laws. 

"Women's lives are saved when abortion is legal," Ms Coen said. 

"And saving women's lives strengthens the family, makes societies
healthier, economies grow faster and countries stronger. It's a
win-win story." 

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/in_depth/7049598.stm

Published: 2007/10/18 12:49:09 GMT

© BBC MMVII

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