Zika VirusUN warns against laws restricting pregnancy
The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Al Hussein,
disclosed this in a statement made available to newsmen on Friday in New
York
By NAN
The United Nations (UN) has
called for the repeal of laws and policies that restrict access to
sexual and reproductive health services in contravention of
international standards.
The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Al Hussein, disclosed this in a statement made available to newsmen on Friday in New York.
The
statement said that the UN position was in response to advice to women
by some governments to delay getting pregnant due to the possible link
between the rampaging Zika virus and neurological disorders affecting
newborns.
According to the statement, upholding
women’s human rights was essential if the response to the Zika health
emergency would be effective.
``Clearly, managing the spread of Zika is a major challenge to governments in Latin America.
``However,
the advice of some governments to women to delay getting pregnant
ignores the reality that many women and girls simply cannot exercise
control over when they become pregnant.
``The circumstance is made more difficult in environment where sexual violence is so common,’’ the statement said.
The
statement noted that ``in situations where sexual violence is rampant
and sexual and reproductive health services are unavailable, efforts to
halt Zika crisis will not be enhanced by stopping women from getting
pregnant’’.
The statement stressed that, amid the
continuing spread of the virus, authorities must ensure that their
public health responses were pursued in conformity with human
health-related rights obligations.
``Upholding human rights is essential to an effective public health response.
``This
requires that governments ensure that women, men and adolescents have
access to comprehensive and affordable quality sexual and reproductive
health services and information, without discrimination.
``Health
services must be delivered in a way that ensures the woman’s informed
consent, respect for her dignity and the guarantee of her privacy.
``Laws
and policies that restrict her access to these services must be
urgently reviewed in line with human rights obligations in order to
ensure the right to health for all in practice,’’ it stated.
The
News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the World Health Organisation
(WHO) has declared a public health emergency on the spread of the
virus.
The Organisation had said that causative
link between Zika and microcephaly - babies born with abnormally small
heads and underdeveloped brain- and Guillain-Barré Syndrome (a neurological condition), is still under investigation.
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