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Date Posted: 23:33:59 01/17/13 Thu
Author: IMRD
Subject: jan 17 news

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/342197/philippine-birth-control-law-takes-effect


Philippine birth control law takes effect
Agence France-Presse
2:56 pm | Thursday, January 17th, 2013


Lawmakers attend a session at the House of Representatives Monday, opting to end debate on the controversial Reproductive Health Bill. AP FILE PHOTO
MANILA, Philippines – A controversial birth control law came into effect in the Philippines Thursday after more than a decade of bitter opposition from the influential Catholic church, with women saying the change came as a relief.
The government is still threshing out how to implement the law, which proponents say will help moderate the nation’s rapid population growth, reduce poverty and bring down high maternal mortality.
But Catholic groups have already shifted their battle to the courts, questioning the law’s constitutionality. The church, which counts 80 percent of Filipinos as followers, disallows the use of artificial contraceptives.
A group of women lining up for contraceptives at a non-governmental organisation’s health centre in a slum area of Manila said the change of law came as a relief.
Housewife Nerissa Gallo, 44, who has already had 16 children, said it would bring contraceptives into the reach of the poor.
She broke into tears as she recalled the difficulty she has faced in raising her children, four of whom died after suffering from diarrhoea.
Asked about the church’s opposition, she said: “We don’t pay attention to that. They are not the ones who are giving birth again and again. We are the ones who have to find a way to care for the children.”
The medical charity Merlin praised the law as a “milestone” but said more efforts were needed to make sure it was properly implemented.
“There is likely to be cultural opposition… led by religious conservatives, which could make it hard for clinics to offer services,” country director, Maxime Piasecki, said in a statement.
President Benigno Aquino III signed the bill into law last month in the face of strong lobbying by the Catholic church, and religious leaders have vowed that the fight is not over.
The church is now relying on lay groups that have filed petitions with the Supreme Court questioning the constitutionality of the law, said Roy Lagarde, a spokesman for the country’s Catholic bishops.
The bishops will hold a regular meeting this weekend where measures to oppose the law will be discussed, he added.
The law’s chief author Congressman Edcel Lagman said he was confident the court would uphold the change.
“We have long expected that the opposition will go to the Supreme Court. We have prepared for this eventuality,” he told AFP.
Although took effect as of Thursday, Hazel Chua, an official at the Health Department’s family planning unit, said they were still preparing implementation rules and regulations, which will only be released in April.
Under the law, government health centres will have to have a supply of contraceptives, unlike in the past when local mayors could be intimidated by the church into not providing birth control services, she said.


http://www.journal.com.ph/index.php/news/top-stories/42999-no-tro-vs-rh-law



No TRO vs RH law

Published : Wednesday, January 16, 2013 00:00 Article Views : 113
Written by : Hector Lawas


THE Supreme Court ordered the government to file its comment on a petition questioning the constitutionality of the controversial Reproductive Health Law.

In an en banc hearing, the justices decided not to immediately issue a temporary restraining order which would halt the implementation of the law.

The SC deferred the issuance of the TRO until the necessary explanations have been filed.

Instead, the high tribunal ordered respondent Malacañang, which shall be represented by the Office of the Solicitor General, to file its comment within ten days from receipt of its order.

The comments that shall be filed will serve as the basis whether or not the high court shall issue an injunction order against the law.

RH law is now considered the most controversial case pending before the SC.

A petition has been filed before the SC seeking to repeal the controversial law which sought to improve public access to reproductive health services, including natural and artificial family planning options.

Couple James and Lovely Imbong in their petition for certiorari argued that the law violates the Constitution which upholds the ideal of an unconditional respect for life, among others.

On behalf of their minor children and the Magnificat Child Development Center, the couple filed the petition with the high court naming as respondents Executive Secretary Paquito Ochoa, Education Secretary Armin Luistro, Interior and Local Government secretary Manuel Roxas II, Budget Secretary Florencio Abad and Health Secretary Enrique Ona.

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