Reproductive Health Awareness

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Parliament has done something this week that once seemed nearly impossible in Pakistan’s legislative culture. It passed a bill mandating reproductive health education in schools. The Federal Supervision of Curricula Amendment Bill, cleared by both houses and awaiting presidential assent, requires that students aged 14 and above in Islamabad’s educational institutions receive structured instruction on reproductive health.

It is modest and carefully worded — parental consent is required, the scope is limited to the capital — yet it still constitutes a genuine act of institutional courage in a society where the subject has long been treated as unspeakable.

The discomfort surrounding the word “reproductive” is itself the problem. For generations, Pakistani children have entered puberty without a framework and without language. The consequences are written in the country’s maternal mortality figures.

The harder question is what happens beyond the Islamabad boundary. Punjab, home to more than half the country’s population, has in the past bowed to pressure from religious groups and halted reproductive health programmes in schools. Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan remain deeply resistant to any formal conversation about adolescent health in classrooms.

Sindh has made fitful progress but lacks consistency. Provincial governments must follow where Parliament has led — and they can do so without abandoning their social sensitivities, using the same parental consent framework as a bridge between public health necessity and community trust.

Religious and community leaders are not a monolith. Many, when engaged honestly, understand that an informed child is a safer child. The framing is everything. This is not about importing alien values. It is the responsibility of the state to ensure that the next generation of Pakistanis does not inherit the same dangerous silence that has cost this country so many young lives.

Editorial Published in Express Tribune on March 16th, 2026

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