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Perspective, Volume 7, Issue 1
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www.thesolutionsjournal.org | January-February 2016 | Solutions  | 29 Perspectives D uring a visit to Kenya in the  summer of 2015, President  Barack Obama gave a rousing speech  to a crowd of Kenyan youth at a soccer  stadium in Nairobi, citing the advance- ment of women’s rights as a major  factor in the country’s progress. “Treating women as second-class  citizens is a bad tradition,” said  Obama. “It holds you back. There’s no  excuse for sexual assault or domestic  violence… These traditions may go  back centuries; they have no place  in the 21 st century. They are issues of  right or wrong in any culture.” 1 The speech was well received by  many of the young Kenyans in atten- dance, but for all of its gender equality  rhetoric, drew severe criticism from  several Kenyan women’s rights organi- zations. The reason? Obama failed to  address the controversial US foreign aid  policy, the Helms Amendment, which  precludes the use of any US aid dollars  to fund abortions in other countries. As  it is currently enforced, the policy acts  as a blanket ban for the use of foreign  aid funds for abortions under any cir- cumstances, including rape, incest, and  endangerment of the mother’s life. “In Kenya, maternal deaths and  injuries can and must be prevented,”  says Evelyne Opondo, Nairobi-based  regional director for Africa at the  Center for Reproductive Rights (CRR).  “President Obama has been a cham- pion for women’s health in the United  States, so we now call on him to take a  stand for women worldwide and fix the  Helms Amendment.” President Obama  has remained consistent throughout  his presidency on the right of a  woman to choose when to terminate  a pregnancy, even as abortion access  has become increasingly limited for  Helms Hurts: How the US Prevents Thousands of Women  from Accessing Safe Abortions Each Year by Kendall Bousquet William Murphy Activists call for safe abortion options for women at a rally in Dublin in 2011. Bousquet, K. Helms (2016). Hurts: How the US Prevents Thousands of Women from Accessing Safe Abortions Each Year. Solutions 7(1): 29–31. thesolutionsjournal.com/2016/1/helms-hurts
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www.thesolutionsjournal.org  |  January-February 2016  |  Solutions  |  29

Perspectives

During a visit to Kenya in the summer of 2015, President 

Barack Obama gave a rousing speech to a crowd of Kenyan youth at a soccer stadium in Nairobi, citing the advance-ment of women’s rights as a major factor in the country’s progress.

“Treating women as second-class citizens is a bad tradition,” said Obama. “It holds you back. There’s no excuse for sexual assault or domestic violence… These traditions may go back centuries; they have no place in the 21st century. They are issues of right or wrong in any culture.”1

The speech was well received by many of the young Kenyans in atten-dance, but for all of its gender equality rhetoric, drew severe criticism from several Kenyan women’s rights organi-zations. The reason? Obama failed to address the controversial US foreign aid policy, the Helms Amendment, which precludes the use of any US aid dollars to fund abortions in other countries. As it is currently enforced, the policy acts as a blanket ban for the use of foreign aid funds for abortions under any cir-cumstances, including rape, incest, and endangerment of the mother’s life.

“In Kenya, maternal deaths and injuries can and must be prevented,” says Evelyne Opondo, Nairobi-based regional director for Africa at the Center for Reproductive Rights (CRR). “President Obama has been a cham-pion for women’s health in the United States, so we now call on him to take a stand for women worldwide and fix the Helms Amendment.” President Obama has remained consistent throughout his presidency on the right of a woman to choose when to terminate a pregnancy, even as abortion access has become increasingly limited for 

Helms Hurts: How the US Prevents Thousands of Women from Accessing Safe Abortions Each Yearby Kendall Bousquet

William Murphy Activists call for safe abortion options for women at a rally in Dublin in 2011.

Bousquet, K. Helms (2016). Hurts: How the US Prevents Thousands of Women from Accessing Safe Abortions Each Year. Solutions 7(1): 29–31.thesolutionsjournal.com/2016/1/helms-hurts

30  |  Solutions  |  January-February 2016  |  www.thesolutionsjournal.org

Perspectives

many women due to bills introduced by Republican lawmakers, and in the face of domestic terrorist attacks, such as the shooting at a Colorado Planned Parenthood clinic in November 2015 which killed three people and wounded nine. Reproductive health activists like Opondo are calling for Obama to defend the same right for women abroad.

Introduced in 1973 by Republican US senator Jesse Helms, the Helms Amendment states that, “No foreign assistance funds may be used to pay for abortion as a method of family planning or to motivate or coerce any person to practice abortions.” The policy was enacted in the same year as Roe v. Wade, and exists as a living relic of the conservative reaction to the introduction of legal abortion domesti-cally. The restrictions outlined in the amendment are unique to the United States, the largest supplier of foreign aid globally. “The United States is the only major donor to have any kind of restrictions” for funding abortions, says Aram Schvey, senior policy coun-sel at the CRR. “Other countries simply don’t.” The United Kingdom, the second largest donor, contends that abortion procedures may be covered under foreign aid funds, citing the fact that girls and women raped in armed conflict are entitled to abortions when medically necessary under Article 3 

of the Geneva Convention, and has called upon the United States to repeal the Helms Amendment. Norway, also citing international law, has similarly challenged the policy.

Given varying infrastructure, political circumstances, and the status of women’s rights in aid-receiving countries, some women are left more vulnerable by the Helms Amendment 

than others. “In Kenya in particular, there’s evidence that US influence has been particularly noxious,” says Schvey. The USAID Global Health Initiative’s Kenya strategy acknowl-edges that, “maternal mortality levels in Kenya remain unacceptably high at 488 per 100,000 live births,” and cites the United Nations estimate that one in every 39 Kenyan women dies in childbirth. Kenya’s Ministry of Health states that unsafe abortions, often coupled with side effects like sepsis, ruptured uterus, and postpartum hemorrhage, is one of the top causes of maternal death.

The Ministry of Health’s National Reproductive Health Policy goes on to say that adolescents aged 10 to 19 are the group most at risk of unplanned pregnancy and unsafe abortions. These under-the-table abortions have had devastating effects for women and girls in Kenya, with those who survive the practice often experiencing appall-ing health complications. In Failure to

Deliver, the CRR’s report on women’s health rights in Kenya, a nurse administrator describing her experi-ence treating women who received unsafe abortions recalled that, “One woman’s infection was so bad that we could smell her while she was outside approaching the building, and flies were following her. She had … an abor-tion about a week ago, and everything was toxic.”2 Laura Bassett, writing for The Huffington Post, documented cases of women who “insert poisonous herbs into their vaginas, drink crushed glass,” and who have been forced to have their “stomachs stomped on by village elders until they miscarry.”3

Access to medical abortions is highly restricted in Kenya, though the Constitution does allow for the proce-dure to be legally performed in cases of physical or mental health emergencies, if the life of the mother is in danger, or where abortion is permitted “by any other written law.” Despite these provi-sions, which would allow for life-saving abortions to be legally performed, the Helms Amendment nonetheless bars the use of any funds for the procedure. Given this, reproductive health groups claim that there is a need for a reinter-pretation of the policy.

The Helms Amendment stipulates that USAID, “cannot pay for the per-formance of abortions as a method of family planning. It is not an outright ban,” says Schvey. Situations which fall outside of the definition of family planning, he says, “would include rape, life endangerment, incest, [and] health endangerment.”

The CRR is not alone in calling for a reinterpretation of the policy. In 2015, a coalition letter addressed to President Obama consisting of 71 organizations, including Planned Parenthood, the American Civil Liberties Union, and a number of faith-based groups, called for a reconsideration of the current implementation of the Helms 

“President Obama has been a champion for women’s health in the United States, so we now call on him to take a stand for women worldwide and fix the Helms Amendment.” — Evelyne Opondo

www.thesolutionsjournal.org  |  January-February 2016  |  Solutions  |  31

Perspectives

Amendment, while 81 Democrats in Congress have urged that Obama pro-claim that the policy allow for aid to go to abortions in cases of rape, incest, and life endangerment.

In the 47 years since the Helms Amendment has been implemented, hundreds of thousands of women have died as a result of unsafe abortions. As the death toll continues to climb, it is with a sense of urgency that civil society organizations and politicians seek a reinterpretation of the policy. Addressing the Planned Parenthood 

National Conference, President Obama stated that efforts to defund the orga-nization are an attempt by Republican lawmakers to tell women, “You’re on your own. They’re talking about shut-ting those women out at a time when they may need it most—shutting off communities that need more health options for women, not less.” Until he chooses to engage with those calling for a reinterpretation of the Helms Amendment, it remains to be seen if President Obama is willing to extend the same concern to women abroad. 

Heinrich Böll Stiftung East & Horn of Africa A woman poses a question at an event titled “Unsafe Abortion: Is Kenya Brave Enough to Take a Stand?” as part of the May 2014 Gender Forum, a monthly public dialogue in Nairobi.

References1.  Smith, D. Barack Obama in Kenya: ‘no excuse’ 

for treating women as second-class citizens. The

Guardian [online] (July 26, 2015) http://www.

theguardian.com/us-news/2015/jul/26/barack-

obama-condemns-tradition-women-second-class-

citizens-nairobi.

2.  Center for Reproductive Rights and Federation 

of Women Lawyers – Kenya. Failure to Deliver: 

Violations of Women’s Human Rights in Kenyan 

Health Facilities [online] (2007) http://www.

reproductiverights.org/sites/default/files/

documents/pub_bo_failuretodeliver.pdf.

3.  Bassett, L. Instruments of Oppression. The Huffington

Post [online] (2015) http://highline.huffingtonpost.

com/articles/en/kenya-abortion/.


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