Kenya Court Reverses Landmark Ruling on Abortion Rights

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Kenya Court Reverses Landmark Ruling on Abortion Rights
Kenya Court Reverses Landmark Ruling on Abortion Rights

What You Need to Know

A Kenyan appeals court has overturned a significant ruling that recognized access to abortion as a fundamental right. This decision has raised concerns among rights groups, as Kenya’s legal framework around abortion remains ambiguous, leading to unsafe practices and police harassment. The Centre for Reproductive Rights plans to appeal to the Supreme Court.

Africa-Press – Kenya. A Kenyan appeals court on Friday overturned a landmark ruling that established access to abortion as a fundamental right.

Kenya is a deeply Christian country where abortions are legal but still taboo, pushing hundreds of thousands of women and girls towards backstreet clinics that put their lives in danger.

The Centre for Reproductive Rights, an international NGO, says seven Kenyan women die every day from unsafe abortions, and many face extortion by police due to uncertainty around the law.

Kenya’s 2010 constitution allows for abortions if the but the country’s penal code, written during Britain’s colonial rule, has yet to be amended to reflect that.

The court case dated back to September 2019, when a 16-year-old girl was arrested in her hospital bed by police in the coastal area of Kilifi, along with the clinician, Salim Mohammed.

She had come to the clinic with severe complications from an abortion, including pain and bleeding, and Mohammed determined she had lost the baby and provided post-abortion care, their lawyers say.

Mohammed was charged with providing abortion services and held in custody for a week. The girl was charged with procuring an abortion, and because she could not afford bail, was held in a juvenile prison for more than a month.

A ‘deeply disappointing decision’

The High Court ruling in March 2022 not only quashed the charges but affirmed that access to abortion was a constitutional right, and that patients must be protected from practices such as forced medical examinations used to prosecute them.

That was overturned by the appeals court on Friday, which said the law was clear that the right to life starts at conception, and so lower courts had the right to investigate whether the girl’s health was in danger before she sought an abortion.

the judges ruled.

they added.

The Centre for Reproductive Rights called it and said it would appeal to the Supreme Court.

it said in a statement.

it added.

Rights groups say the legal uncertainty around abortions has often led to police harassment and extortion of patients and doctors.

A study by the African Population and Health Research Centre, the ministry of health, and the Guttmacher Institute estimated there were more than 790,000 induced abortions in 2023 alone.

It said more than 300,000 received post-abortion care in a health facility, primarily due to complications from unsafe abortions.

Abortion laws in Kenya are influenced by the country’s colonial penal code, which has not been updated to align with the 2010 constitution that allows for abortions under certain conditions. The legal landscape has created a challenging environment for women seeking safe abortion services, often resulting in dangerous situations and legal repercussions for both patients and healthcare providers. The recent court ruling has reignited debates about women’s rights and health in Kenya, highlighting the urgent need for legal reform.

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