Reproductive and Sexual Rights - IPS Inter Press Service / Independent News
Thursday, September 02, 2010   21:01 GMT    
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AFRICA
Maputo Protocol a Work in Progress
Analysis by Susan Anyangu-Amu*
NAIROBI - Kenyans are still euphoric over the referendum endorsing a progressive new constitution; but the heat generated by its opponents around their main rallying point - abortion rights - is a reminder of the wide gap between law and implementation in Africa, particularly when it concerns women's rights.
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KENYA
Medical Smart Card Extended to Maternal Care
By Susan Anyangu-Amu

NAIROBI - Kenyans can now save towards the cost of childbirth at the country's largest maternal hospital thanks to a medical smart card system.
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AFRICA
Shortage of Skills for Reproductive Health
By Susan Anyangu-Amu*

NAIROBI - Dr Geoffrey Kasembeli says he worked almost seven years without a day off: that's how severe the shortage of obstetricians and gynaecologists in Kenya is. A similar situation prevails across the continent, a symptom of the weakness of reproductive health care in Africa.
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PAKISTAN
Controversial Drug Welcomed by Some, Worries Others
By Zofeen Ebrahim
KARACHI, Pakistan - With its latest hotline a surefire hit, the non-government group Aware Girls could not be any happier.
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KENYA
Resounding Yes to New Constitution
By Susan Anyangu-Amu
NAIROBI - Jubilant supporters say it is a new dawn for Kenya. Sixty-seven percent of votes cast endorsed a new constitution more than two decades after reform was first raised.
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URUGUAY
Millennium Goal on Maternal Health in Sight
By Inés Acosta
MONTEVIDEO - Uruguay is on the point of reaching the Millennium Development Goal for reducing the maternal mortality ratio, but it is still behind in other aspects of maternal health, like providing integrated sexual and reproductive health care, fighting syphilis and checking on mothers and babies during the postpartum period.
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LATIN AMERICA
Prevention Is Weakest Link in AIDS Fight
By Daniela Estrada*
SANTIAGO - Many Latin American countries have made strides in legislation and policies that promote sex education and health services for young people, which are essential for fighting AIDS. But implementation has been slow and often faces opposition, warn experts.
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MALAYSIA
Debate on Sex Education Rises with Teen Pregnancies
By Baradan Kuppusamy
KUALA LUMPUR - The prospect of motherhood filled 17-year-old Fatimah’s heart with dread.
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ARGENTINA
Being Gay No Longer a Bar to Marriage
By Marcela Valente
BUENOS AIRES - Argentina is officially the first Latin American country to allow same-sex couples to marry, with the passage of a law Thursday that also permits gay couples to adopt children and to use assisted fertilisation to conceive a baby, rights that were hitherto restricted to heterosexual couples.
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LIBERIA
Men in Testing New Role as Midwives
By Bonnie Allen
ZWEDRU, Liberia - Henry Teh gently slides down a blue hospital sheet to expose the bare belly of a pregnant woman. As he pokes around to feel the position of the foetus, the midwife-in-training knows he is breaking tradition and changing the face of obstetric care in Liberia.
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THAILAND
For Transgenders, Identity Papers Are No Simple Matter
By Sutthida Malikaew
BANGKOK - In New Zealand, where Sujinrat Prachathai enjoys resident status, she is a woman able to append ‘Mrs’ to her name to signify that she is married. Here in Thailand, however, she has to be addressed as ‘Mr’ since she is still considered male even though she underwent a sex-change operation years ago.
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Football Leaves Legacy of Hope in Namibia
By Patience Nyangove
WINDHOEK - Throughout the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, organisers have insisted that the legacy of the event goes far beyond the sporting spectacle. In the dusty streets of a Windhoek township, Deon Namiseb believes this is true.
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LATIN AMERICA
Time to Value Women's Unpaid Work
By Daniela Estrada
SANTIAGO - The time has come for Latin American countries to put an economic value on the work that women do as they take care of households, children and the elderly, says ECLAC, the United Nations regional economic agency.
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EDUCATION
EnGendering Awareness in Trainee Teachers
By Dalia Acosta
HAVANA - The teacher seats the most attentive girls in the front row and the troublesome boys at the back of the classroom. He punishes the liveliest pupil and lets the withdrawn one be. Dark-skinned boys sit with dark-skinned girls, boys play with boys and girls with girls.
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Sexual and reproductive health and rights, along with women's empowerment, have been acknowledged worldwide as essential elements in promoting poverty alleviation and moving towards sustainable development. Critical areas of concern include: HIV/AIDS prevention; reaching out to adolescents and youths; promoting gender equality, empowering women and making motherhood safer by reducing maternal mortality rates, among others. The involvement of men, especially young men, as active participants in understanding and thus accepting and promoting women's and men's reproductive rights, is thought to be crucial to the successful outcome of population policies and programmes  

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TERRAVIVA - 8th International Congress on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific (Colombo, Sri Lanka)
Partnership for MDG Goal 5

WHO Gender and Reproductive Rights
Sexual Rights
Planned Parenthood
Women's Rights Net
World Association of Sexology
Reproductive and Sexual Rights
United Nations Population Fund - UNFPA

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UNFPA - United Nations Population Fund
IPS gratefully acknowledges the support of UNFPA in supporting an IPS programme of work in 2009 on population, gender and reproductive health.