Taiknya basilemak peak kayak omongannya

rezameutia <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:          betul juga, fiq.

biasanya, kepala orang isinya otak. tapi, kenapa allah bikin pala
anda isinya taik?

allahnya salah disain tuh...

--- In proletar@yahoogroups.com, "utusan.allah" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> 
> 
> 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
> 
> --- End forwarded message ---
>



                         

       
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