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Ipas Nigeria demands legal reform, supportive care for women, girls…Says unsafe abortion preventable
A nonprofit group, Ipas Nigeria Health Foundation has called on government and all stakeholders to ensure a more supportive environment that empowers women and girls in the country, to make informed decisions about their lives and health.
The Country Director of Ipas Nigeria Health Foundation, Dr. Lucky Palmer, in a press statement to commemorate the International Women’s Day called for reform of outdated laws in the country to protect women’s access to safe abortion care and equip healthcare workers with adequate training to deliver safe and high-quality services.
He said, “In alignment with this year’s theme, ‘Give to Gain,’ it is critical that women and girls are given the opportunity to make safe abortion choices, because when we give access to safe care, we gain reduced maternal deaths.”
He noted that safe abortion, when provided by trained healthcare professionals or self-managed with prescribed medication, is extremely safe.
He lamented that due to persistent myths, restrictive laws, moral and religious stigma, and limited access to services, abortion remains unsafe for many women in Nigeria. Unsafe abortion contributes to at least 13% of maternal mortality nationally.
Palmer said evidence also shows that when abortion care is delivered safely, it is 14 times safer than carrying a pregnancy to term, yet unsafe abortion continues to be a silent killer, driven by stigma, shame, legal restrictions, and limited access to quality care.
“The pervasive incidence of rape and incest creates even more devastating outcomes for survivors, especially due to the stigma surrounding pregnancies resulting from rape.
“Research by Ipas Nigeria shows that 76% of women and girls aged 15–49 have experienced sexual violence, and 3 out of 25 survivors surveyed became pregnant as a result of rape. These women and girls are often forced into unsafe alternatives or required to carry unwanted, trauma inducing pregnancies.”
“Our law is over 150 years old, a colonial law. We have effectively handcuffed women’s ability to make better decisions by attaching stigma and shame to abortion care instead of empathy. This International Women’s Day, we must commit to giving women a safe environment to make informed choices by ensuring accurate information, providing safe abortion care and creating laws that protect abortion access”, he said
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We’ re not leaving PDP, but…— Dickson
Former governor of Bayelsa State and a chieftain of the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC), Seriake Dickson, says he is unhappy with the ‘death’ of the once biggest party in Africa, the People’s Democratic Party (PDP).
Dickson, sensing the collapse of the PDP, has defected to the NDC.
The NDC is currently gaining traction with many bigwig politicians joining the party.
The former Bayelsa governor speaking yesterday during an interview on Channels Television said he was sad with on goings in the PDP.
He further disclosed that former Nigerian president, Dr Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, “must be sad” that the party, which produced three presidents since the return of democracy in 1999, has been “killed and buried”.
When asked if he consulted Jonathan before the move, Dickson, who is from the same state as the ex-president, said, “What I can say is that President Jonathan, while I’m not his spokesman, must be very sad.
“I know that if I’m sad, having been this attached to the PDP, you can imagine how sad he will be, having been governor, deputy governor, vice president, and president of Nigeria on that platform, and right before your eyes, that platform is evaporating.”
He used the opportunity to introduce his new party to Nigerian saying, “So, my dear Nigerians, you now have a credible alternative opposition party known as the Nigeria Democratic Congress.
“Yes, it is coming at this time. We would have wished it had started some years or months back; we don’t control INEC and their processes. They delayed. We also don’t control the judiciary, but thank God it has finally arrived.”
The PDP is currently embroiled in a deep crisis and may not produce a presidential candidate for the next election.
Despite accusations that the major players in the PDP, like Dickson, are leaving the party, the lawmaker said, “It wouldn’t be correct to say that we are leaving the PDP or that I have left the PDP.
“The PDP, rather unfortunately, has left us, has left me, because the platform has evaporated and ceased to exist.”
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