reproductive rights

Exploring Reproductive Health Rights: What You Need to Know

by Sahar Bandial
2 mins read

As women, many of us have navigated through the uncomfortable changes of puberty with an incomplete understanding of their implications and faced challenging pregnancies without adequate information or healthcare.

Our experiences vary based on geographical location, income, and ethnicity. Yet, a shared absence of a rights-based discourse on access to sexual and reproductive healthcare persists.

Women’s right to sexual and reproductive health is a fundamental human right under international law, intricately linked to the rights to life, dignity, education, information, and equality before the law.

Defined as the right to achieve complete physical, mental, and social well-being in all matters related to reproduction (International Conference on Population and Development), it guarantees autonomy in decisions regarding one’s body, including family planning, without coercion or discrimination (General Comment No. 22, International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights; Article 16, Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women [CEDAW]). It also ensures affordable, non-discriminatory access to healthcare, family planning services, and information (General Comment No. 22, ICESCR).

A recent UNFPA report titled “Interwoven Lives, Threads of Hope: Ending Inequalities in Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights (2024)” paints a grim picture in Pakistan: less than 33% of women have autonomy in sexual and reproductive health decisions; only 52% can decide on their general health; and 55% exercise decision-making in sexual relations. Despite some autonomy in contraceptive use, only 40% of married women aged 15 to 49 use modern methods. The maternal mortality rate is 154 per 100,000 births, with one woman dying every 50 minutes due to pregnancy-related complications. Achieving zero maternal deaths and fulfilling family planning needs seem distant goals for Pakistan.

Most women lack autonomy over their sexual and reproductive health decisions, face barriers to necessary information and services, and suffer high mortality rates during childbirth.

In response, a rights-based discourse on reproductive and maternal health is emerging in Pakistan’s legal landscape. In Human Rights Case No. 17599/2018, the Supreme Court recognized a woman’s right to well-informed and controlled pregnancies as rooted in constitutional rights to life, equality, education, information, and due process, emphasizing the state’s duty to provide family planning information. In a recent case (Sabeen Asghar vs Punjab) on maternity leave provision, the Lahore High Court invoked international law obligations to assert that safe motherhood is a right to health and life, demanding necessary care during pregnancy and childbirth. Violating this right infringes on constitutional guarantees of equal treatment and dignity.

While judicial pronouncements advance women’s reproductive rights in the context of childbirth, the international human rights framework extends these rights more broadly. Past efforts to legislate reproductive rights (CEDAW) at the national level, like the 2019 Punjab draft bill, aimed to ensure comprehensive reproductive healthcare, sexuality education, family planning, safe abortion, and healthcare protocols. However, these efforts often face obstacles in adoption.

Does framing women’s sexual and reproductive health as a human rights issue in law make a difference? It elevates these issues, compelling the state to act decisively amidst resource constraints, education gaps, patriarchy, taboos, and political priorities. It empowers women to hold the state accountable for failing to protect and provide for their sexual and reproductive health needs.

Acknowledgment: (Opinion) Published in Dawn News on 4th July 2024.

Previous Story

Shocking Swap: Sick Baby Boy Replaced with Dead Girl

schools to get chromebooks
Next Story

Digital Punjab: Schools to get Chromebooks

Latest from Blog

Ghotki Police Register Gang Rape FIR

SUKKUR: The Ghotki police have registered a gang rape case against some influential figures of Adilpur and their several associates on May 19 after much uproar on social media over the “horrific and inhuman treatment” allegedly meted out to the victim. The 15-year-old seemingly devastated girl had narrated her ordeal…

The Polio Fight Goes On

It is enough of an ignominy that this country is one of only two, the other being Afghanistan, where polio still remains endemic. However, it is even more shameful that even those brave souls who are trying to eradicate this disease from the country are routinely the target of violent,…

Five Children Die Within a Week as Measles Outbreak Hits Sujawal Coastal Belt

THATTA: A severe measles outbreak has triggered widespread panic across the coastal belt of the Shahbunder taluka (sub-district) in Sujawal district, where five children have died within a week and more than 20 others are reportedly suffering from the highly contagious disease across various villages. According to local sources, the…

Sana Yousaf’s Killer Gets Death Sentence

ISLAMABAD: An Islamabad sessions court sentenced Umar Hayat, the main culprit in the Sana Yousaf murder case, to death on May 19 after finding him guilty of killing the teenager at her residence in June last year. Hayat was arrested a day after 17-year-old Yousaf was shot dead in her…

LHC Seeks Reply on Plea against 3-month Summer Vacations

LAHORE: The Lahore High Court (LHC) on May 19 issued notices to the Punjab government and other respondents on a petition challenging the decision to close educational institutions for three months during summer vacations. Justice Khalid Ishaq heard the petition filed by the All Private Schools Federation and sought replies…
Go toTop