The Prague Post - Abortion in Afghanistan: 'My mother crushed my stomach with a stone'

EUR -
AED 4.169986
AFN 72.100737
ALL 94.391098
AMD 417.77146
ANG 2.032937
AOA 1041.786236
ARS 1679.663048
AUD 1.646912
AWG 2.045254
AZN 1.926735
BAM 1.958195
BBD 2.286697
BDT 139.653864
BGN 1.919933
BHD 0.428237
BIF 3389.149222
BMD 1.135464
BND 1.474949
BOB 7.845837
BRL 5.914406
BSD 1.135389
BTN 107.442235
BWP 15.533338
BYN 3.199813
BYR 22255.086817
BZD 2.283463
CAD 1.61698
CDF 2576.367024
CHF 0.922793
CLF 0.026505
CLP 1043.17317
CNY 7.710363
CNH 7.736084
COP 3911.024933
CRC 516.84801
CUC 1.135464
CUP 30.089786
CVE 110.392713
CZK 24.231246
DJF 201.795215
DKK 7.476335
DOP 66.553443
DZD 151.588929
EGP 56.33296
ERN 17.031954
ETB 180.141168
FJD 2.54821
FKP 0.860905
GBP 0.862572
GEL 2.998038
GGP 0.860905
GHS 12.716944
GIP 0.860905
GMD 82.319575
GNF 9948.385397
GTQ 8.660591
GYD 237.496721
HKD 8.900877
HNL 30.339263
HRK 7.535614
HTG 148.45613
HUF 355.896878
IDR 20466.163894
ILS 3.392653
IMP 0.860905
INR 107.234262
IQD 1487.457333
IRR 1561319.240986
ISK 144.215003
JEP 0.860905
JMD 178.822628
JOD 0.805079
JPY 183.648184
KES 147.076334
KGS 99.295871
KHR 4561.719358
KMF 492.791461
KPW 1021.917649
KRW 1755.996953
KWD 0.351415
KYD 0.946178
KZT 552.542763
LAK 25054.004953
LBP 101680.766264
LKR 383.038436
LRD 206.938611
LSL 18.83747
LTL 3.352729
LVL 0.68683
LYD 7.272605
MAD 10.690957
MDL 20.108034
MGA 4797.333658
MKD 61.63027
MMK 2383.951162
MNT 4065.035148
MOP 9.170116
MRU 45.498454
MUR 54.740689
MVR 17.54292
MWK 1972.300769
MXN 20.014925
MYR 4.697432
MZN 72.567796
NAD 18.837011
NGN 1560.236095
NIO 41.569315
NOK 11.191907
NPR 171.903229
NZD 2.012535
OMR 0.436591
PAB 1.135424
PEN 3.885514
PGK 4.977021
PHP 69.762949
PKR 315.715125
PLN 4.285671
PYG 6925.591626
QAR 4.138741
RON 5.215294
RSD 117.396712
RUB 85.049257
RWF 1664.589657
SAR 4.248073
SBD 9.142699
SCR 15.685497
SDG 681.27782
SEK 11.077447
SGD 1.473503
SHP 0.847738
SLE 28.160419
SLL 23810.108396
SOS 648.912077
SRD 42.534885
STD 23501.804299
STN 24.611174
SVC 9.934368
SYP 125.505175
SZL 18.837622
THB 37.978423
TJS 10.542125
TMT 3.974123
TND 3.335424
TOP 2.733924
TRY 52.815974
TTD 7.698652
TWD 36.133746
TZS 2975.48579
UAH 50.964774
UGX 4189.12308
USD 1.135464
UYU 45.32623
UZS 13642.594942
VES 704.842427
VND 29902.434251
VUV 134.891297
WST 3.135744
XAF 656.780453
XAG 0.019704
XAU 0.000283
XCD 3.068647
XCG 2.046266
XDR 0.814089
XOF 650.62094
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.950018
ZAR 18.822155
ZMK 10220.529277
ZMW 20.465659
ZWL 365.61882
  • RBGPF

    0.9600

    61.3

    +1.57%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4700

    18.16

    -2.59%

  • CMSC

    -0.0450

    22.065

    -0.2%

  • JRI

    -0.0600

    12.57

    -0.48%

  • CMSD

    0.0600

    22.02

    +0.27%

  • BCC

    5.8600

    77.66

    +7.55%

  • BCE

    0.1600

    23.2

    +0.69%

  • VOD

    -0.2400

    13.81

    -1.74%

  • NGG

    1.2600

    82.83

    +1.52%

  • RIO

    -1.5500

    94.03

    -1.65%

  • RELX

    -0.0600

    31.15

    -0.19%

  • AZN

    2.0000

    183.02

    +1.09%

  • GSK

    -0.9800

    51.09

    -1.92%

  • BP

    -1.4700

    37.86

    -3.88%

  • BTI

    0.6500

    61.39

    +1.06%

Abortion in Afghanistan: 'My mother crushed my stomach with a stone'
Abortion in Afghanistan: 'My mother crushed my stomach with a stone' / Photo: Sajjad HUSSAIN - AFP/File

Abortion in Afghanistan: 'My mother crushed my stomach with a stone'

When Bahara was four months pregnant, she went to a Kabul hospital to beg for an abortion. "We're not allowed," a doctor told her. "If someone finds out, we will all end up in prison."

Text size:

Abortion in Afghanistan is illegal and you can be locked up for having or assisting one.

But Bahara was desperate. Her jobless husband had ordered her to "find a solution" -- he did not want a fifth daughter.

"We can barely afford to feed" the girls as it is, Bahara, 35, told AFP. "If it was a boy, he could go to school and work."

But there are no such prospects for a girl, with women banned from secondary schools, universities and most jobs since the Taliban returned to power in 2021.

So Bahara took a neighbour's advice and bought -- for the equivalent of two dollars -- a herbal tea at the market made from a type of mallow that induces contractions.

The bleeding was so bad she had to go back to the hospital. "I told them that I had fallen, but they knew I was lying because I had no marks on my body. They were angry but did not report me," said the mother-of-four.

"They operated and removed the remains of the foetus. Since then I have felt very weak."

The plant she used can be "very risky", said ethnobotanist Guadalupe Maldonado Andrade from the California State Polytechnic University, Pomona. A wrong dose can cause organ damage and severe haemorrhaging.

Bahara's is not an isolated case.

Two other women AFP talked to during our months-long investigation also risked their lives to abort. Nesa took tablets toxic to the embryo and Mariam crushed her stomach with a heavy stone.

Of the dozen women AFP talked to about their clandestine abortions, only five agreed to be interviewed on condition we protected their anonymity and changed their names. Even outside Taliban circles, the fear of being stigmatised, and arrested, is strong in Afghanistan's deeply conservative society.

- More 'miscarriages' -

With such a taboo, and no real statistics, Sharafat Zaman of the Afghan health ministry insisted "few" women are affected.

The Taliban -- who follow a strict interpretation of Islam -- did not change the abortion laws when they returned to power in 2021.

But officials check more often that terminations are not being carried out in hospitals, panicking doctors and pushing women to have abortions in secret, according to many health sector workers AFP interviewed.

Several doctors said the number of miscarriages has increased since 2021, which they suspect may conceal clandestine abortions given the injuries patients present and their psychological state.

Two international medical organisations also said they noticed the same trend, while access to contraception has become more difficult.

"Budget constraints and the forced closure of family planning services endanger access to modern contraception," a UN source told AFP, saying less than half of Afghan women have access to methods such as condoms, implants or pills.

Afghanistan has one of the highest maternal and infant mortality rates in the world, with young women banned from training as midwives or nurses in medical schools since last year.

While health ministry spokesman Zaman acknowledged the dangers of clandestine abortions, and that some women face "problems", he said it was not the government's fault.

Abortion is permitted when the life of a pregnant woman is in grave danger. However, in practice it is rarely granted. For the Taliban abortion is "taking a life", Zaman said.

- He didn't want another girl -

"Before (the Taliban's return) we were able to perform more abortions, there were NGOs helping us and no government checks," said a 58-year-old gynaecologist in Kabul.

"Now doctors are afraid because if they check prescriptions at a pharmacy, it's very dangerous" for them.

Women are afraid to ask for a termination in hospital, she said, "so more are trying it at home, and then they go to hospital saying they have had a miscarriage."

Some pharmacies sell them the abortion drug misoprostol without a prescription, the doctor said.

While some healthcare workers are compassionate, others can demand exorbitant sums in what is one of the world's poorest countries.

Nesa, a mother of eight daughters and one son, found out she was pregnant with another girl at four months.

"I knew if my husband found out, he would throw me out. He thinks we do better with boys," the 35-year-old farmer said.

"I begged a clinic to help me. They asked for 10,000 Afghanis (130 euros), which I didn't have. I went to the pharmacy without a prescription and they gave me a malaria drug, saying it would help."

The only antimalarial drugs available in Kabul pharmacies are chloroquine and primaquine, drugs that should not be used during pregnancy, according to the French agency for medicine safety (ANSM), because they are potentially toxic to the foetus.

"I started bleeding and lost consciousness," Nesa said. "I was taken to the hospital and I begged the doctors not to report me and they removed the remains of the foetus."

- Constant pain -

Mariam, 22, had an affair. While abortion is a source of shame in Afghanistan and weighs on the entire family, sex outside marriage is often dangerous, sometimes leading to femicides known as "honour killings".

One month into her pregnancy, "my mother contacted a midwife, but she asked for too much money. So my mother brought me home, placed a very heavy stone on my belly and crushed my stomach.

"I screamed and started bleeding," Mariam said. "I went to the hospital and they told me the embryo was gone. Now I am depressed and constantly have stomach pain."

Only one third of women globally live in countries where abortion is allowed on demand, according to the US NGO Center for Reproductive Rights. Illegal abortions result in 39,000 deaths a year worldwide, it estimates.

A Kabul midwife told AFP she feels "helpless and weak for not being able to help (women) more." A gynecologist in the Nangarhar region in the east of the country was equally despairing.

"I feel for these women -- I vowed to help them by becoming a doctor. But we can't," she said.

E.Soukup--TPP