CII On Birth Spacing

1 min read
Pakistan stands at a critical demographic and health crossroads. With one of the highest maternal mortality ratios in the world outside Africa, a population of almost 250 million, high food insecurity and limited water, there is an urgent need for population policy reforms that keep the living alive while reducing the pace of new additions. Birth spacing could be an important tool towards this goal.

The practice is straightforward — deliberate intervals between pregnancies to allow a woman’s body to recover. Pregnancies too close together deplete a mother’s nutritional reserves, significantly increasing risks of anemia, hemorrhage, miscarriage, and even maternal death. Adequate spacing allows her body to recover, leading to healthier pregnancies and stronger babies. It also helps women post-pregnancy, as healthier mothers can do more for their children.

Birth spacing can also lead to smaller families, as parents have the time to plan and decide how many children they can raise. A recent Council of Islamic Ideology (CII) ruling has also strengthened this argument. The CII has endorsed birth spacing for maternal health and family planning, saying Islam not only permits, but even encourages responsible family planning. This religious endorsement will go a long way in dispelling misconceptions about family planning, and could help cross cultural barriers to discuss related subjects, such as contraception.

Whether or not the government can actually capitalise on the edict, however, is up for debate. Federal and provincial authorities have failed to get contraception awareness or availability up to acceptable levels due to cultural barriers, leading to nonsensical awareness campaigns and a lack of political will caused by elected officials’ fear of offending religious voters. The CII has created an opportunity for the government to actually design and implement a comprehensive, modern policy, but it is still unknown who, if anyone, is willing to take the first step.

Editorial published in the Express Tribune on 25 July 2025

Previous Story

Children’s Hospital Staff Unpaid For 4 Months

Next Story

Teahcer Arrested For Beating Child

Latest from Blog

Outsourcing of Colleges: Teachers, Students continue Protests across KP

PESHAWAR: The province-wide protests against the proposed outsourcing of government colleges in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa have intensified as teachers and students jointly staged demonstrations, boycotted classes and warned of an escalation if the policy was not withdrawn by October 11, 2025. The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Professors, Lecturers and Librarians Association (KPPLLA) had…

60,000 Students Unable To Attend School Due To Floods

LAHORE: Punjab Education Minister Rana Sikandar Hayat has said that around 60,000 children have been unable to attend school due to the recent floods. He further said that flood relief camps had been set up in 415 schools, where thousands of affected people were still living amid standing water in…

WHO Warns of Rising Vaping Among Pakistani Youth as Global Smoking Rates Fall

ISLAMABAD: As global smoking rates fall to their lowest level in decades, the World Health Organisation (WHO) has warned that new nicotine delivery products—such as e-cigarettes and heated tobacco devices—are rapidly spreading among youth in Pakistan due to loopholes in marketing regulations and the absence of national standards for these…

Khar Students Protest Lack Of Facilities In College

BAJAUR: The students of the Government Postgraduate College Khar here on October 7 staged a protest demonstration by blocking the main Bajaur-Mardan Artery to press for resolution of their issues. Scores of students attended the demonstration held outside the college’s main gate at the main Bajaur-Mardan Road. The protesting students,…

Floods Dampen Pakistan’s Growth Outlook

• World Bank cuts forecast by 0.5pc, predicts inflation may shoot to 7.2pc; exports to decline 1.5pc • WB official says removing barriers to women’s participation in job market can boost GDP per capita by 20-30pc ISLAMABAD: The World Bank on October 7 cut its growth forecast for Pakistan by…
Go toTop