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

EUR -
AED 4.324146
AFN 77.112425
ALL 96.483047
AMD 449.109643
ANG 2.10792
AOA 1079.623677
ARS 1715.367827
AUD 1.758568
AWG 2.119219
AZN 2.004996
BAM 1.958001
BBD 2.372367
BDT 144.070752
BGN 1.955334
BHD 0.443939
BIF 3490.823965
BMD 1.177344
BND 1.514603
BOB 8.157171
BRL 6.561223
BSD 1.177924
BTN 105.866124
BWP 15.485753
BYN 3.401838
BYR 23075.935825
BZD 2.368903
CAD 1.61196
CDF 2590.156111
CHF 0.929295
CLF 0.027453
CLP 1076.974329
CNY 8.248345
CNH 8.238515
COP 4392.845814
CRC 583.551119
CUC 1.177344
CUP 31.199607
CVE 110.964618
CZK 24.263581
DJF 209.237976
DKK 7.468356
DOP 74.113834
DZD 152.490708
EGP 56.120479
ERN 17.660155
ETB 182.488432
FJD 2.675281
FKP 0.872268
GBP 0.871464
GEL 3.161125
GGP 0.872268
GHS 13.333451
GIP 0.872268
GMD 87.123271
GNF 10292.929341
GTQ 9.031154
GYD 246.43916
HKD 9.15277
HNL 31.034994
HRK 7.535824
HTG 154.252112
HUF 386.358864
IDR 19742.875911
ILS 3.744953
IMP 0.872268
INR 105.82674
IQD 1542.320201
IRR 49595.60128
ISK 147.40098
JEP 0.872268
JMD 187.650972
JOD 0.834752
JPY 183.708586
KES 151.753027
KGS 102.913378
KHR 4727.034542
KMF 492.711314
KPW 1059.610451
KRW 1687.951744
KWD 0.361886
KYD 0.981562
KZT 591.299764
LAK 25460.056954
LBP 105431.125316
LKR 365.145018
LRD 209.419971
LSL 19.637929
LTL 3.47639
LVL 0.712164
LYD 6.375287
MAD 10.716768
MDL 19.752368
MGA 5368.686945
MKD 61.573695
MMK 2472.818113
MNT 4187.279376
MOP 9.431384
MRU 46.811028
MUR 54.228246
MVR 18.201622
MWK 2045.637538
MXN 21.16071
MYR 4.780653
MZN 75.235121
NAD 19.638747
NGN 1713.282359
NIO 43.031929
NOK 11.821084
NPR 169.385999
NZD 2.027327
OMR 0.452696
PAB 1.177894
PEN 3.962969
PGK 5.006655
PHP 69.246603
PKR 329.832926
PLN 4.227276
PYG 7982.975103
QAR 4.28669
RON 5.094957
RSD 117.318333
RUB 92.421518
RWF 1709.503001
SAR 4.415558
SBD 9.599344
SCR 16.158903
SDG 708.174642
SEK 10.802935
SGD 1.513416
SHP 0.883313
SLE 28.344544
SLL 24688.312288
SOS 672.852394
SRD 45.032249
STD 24368.636809
STN 25.018553
SVC 10.3065
SYP 13017.778798
SZL 19.649799
THB 37.304718
TJS 10.842682
TMT 4.120703
TND 3.397231
TOP 2.834761
TRY 50.542816
TTD 8.007935
TWD 36.870864
TZS 2890.378292
UAH 49.74591
UGX 4260.790324
USD 1.177344
UYU 46.251607
UZS 14186.990882
VES 339.179565
VND 30946.478223
VUV 142.31635
WST 3.262281
XAF 656.69531
XAG 0.01622
XAU 0.000271
XCD 3.18183
XCG 2.122869
XDR 0.815041
XOF 655.192758
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.737452
ZAR 19.640153
ZMK 10597.508145
ZMW 26.384664
ZWL 379.10418
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    -0.5500

    80.71

    -0.68%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    23.07

    -0.09%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    23.1

    -0.04%

  • NGG

    -0.1900

    77.45

    -0.25%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    15.56

    +0.19%

  • GSK

    0.0300

    49.11

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -1.8400

    80.4

    -2.29%

  • BCC

    -0.6000

    74.53

    -0.81%

  • RELX

    0.2700

    41.38

    +0.65%

  • BCE

    0.3300

    23.38

    +1.41%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    13.48

    +0.07%

  • BTI

    -0.2500

    57.02

    -0.44%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    13.15

    +0.23%

  • AZN

    -0.3800

    92.52

    -0.41%

  • BP

    0.1800

    34.45

    +0.52%

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