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Philippines
Friday, March 29, 2024

People’s choice: Condom or food

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THE Catholic Church said Thursday that the money the government will use to distribute free hormonal contraceptives could be used instead to buy food and essential medicine that ordinary people need.

The Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines statement came after the Supreme Court lifted a two-year restraining order that prevented the government from fully carrying out the Reproductive Health Law.

Fr. Jerome Secillano, executive secretary of the CBCP’s Permanent Committee on Public Affairs, said people should realize the implications of the Health Department bid to fully implement the law.

“We should ask the people. Will you agree to buy billions of pesos worth of pills and condoms? Will thoese make you full when you need food? When you get sick, will the pills and condoms make you better?” he said in Filipino.

The CBCP questioned the wisdom on spending P4.2 billion on contraceptives.

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The Supreme Court decision to lift the restraining order marked a victory over the influential Catholic Church, which opposes all forms of artificial contraception.

Health Secretary Francisco Duque said 51 types of contraceptive pills, coils and injectables could now be distributed to the public after the Food and Drug Administration certified they did not cause abortions, defeating a petition filed by a Catholic group.

“It is now all systems go for us in the Department of Health to implement the [Responsible Parenthood and Reproductive Health] law,” Duque told reporters.

For years, the Church has waged a bruising battle against government efforts to promote birth control despite the country’s widespread poverty and ballooning population.

The Reproductive Health Law granting access to contraceptives was passed in 2012 despite strong Church opposition. However abortion remains illegal.

A religious group filed a case with the Supreme Court charging that many of the government-issued contraceptives were abortifacients and therefore banned.

This prompted the court to issue in 2015 a restraining order on the 51 contraceptives pending a finding by the FDA.

Government stocks of the contraceptives, acquired before this court order, are now being delivered to health offices and development groups to ensure they can be distributed before they expire, Duque said.

President Rodrigo Duterte, a fierce critic of the Catholic church who was elected last year, has promised to deliver the free contraceptives to women as part of his reproductive health push.

Despite Church lobbying to cut funding for contraceptives, Duque said the government had budgeted P4.2 billion for implementation of the law this year.

The head of the government’s Population Commission, Juan Antonio Perez, said the two years that the court order was in place had likely resulted in 500,000 unplanned pregnancies.

Perez said that the Philippines had 20 million women of reproductive age, six million of whom were already using contraceptives.

Perez added a million more were expected to start using contraceptives each year now that the ban had been lifted.

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