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Uganda



ABORTION POLICY



Grounds on which abortion is permitted:



To save the life of the woman Yes

To preserve physical health Yes

To preserve mental health Yes

Rape or incest No

Foetal impairment No

Economic or social reasons No

Available on request No



Additional requirements:



A legal abortion must be performed by a registered physician. Although the law does not require the

approval of a committee, the consent of two physicians is usually sought before a legal abortion can be

performed.







REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH CONTEXT



Government view on fertility level: Too high



Government intervention concerning fertility level: To lower



Government policy on contraceptive use: Direct support provided



Percentage of currently married women using

modern contraception (aged 15-49, 1995): 8



Total fertility rate (1995-2000): 7.1



Age-specific fertility rate (per 1,000 women aged 15-19, 1995-2000): 180



Government has expressed particular concern about:

Morbidity and mortality resulting from induced abortion Yes

Complications of childbearing and childbirth Yes



Maternal mortality ratio (per 100,000 live births, 1990):

National 1 200

Eastern Africa 1 060



Female life expectancy at birth (1995-2000): 40.4









Source: Population Policy Data Bank maintained by the Population Division of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs of the United Nations

Secretariat. For additional sources, see list of references.

148

Uganda



BACKGROUND





Under the Ugandan Penal Code of 15 June 1950 (sections 136-138, 205 and 217) the performance of

abortions is generally prohibited. Any person who, with intent to procure the miscarriage of a woman,

unlawfully administers any noxious thing or uses any means is subject to imprisonment for fourteen years. A

pregnant woman who undertakes the same act or consents to its performance is subject to seven years’

imprisonment. Any person who unlawfully supplies means to procure an abortion knowing that it is unlawfully

intended for that purpose is subject to three years’ imprisonment.



Nonetheless, under other provisions of the Penal Code an abortion may be performed to save the life of a

pregnant woman. Section 217 of the Code provides that a person is not criminally responsible for performing

in good faith and with reasonable care and skill a surgical operation upon an unborn child for the preservation

of the mother’s life if the performance of the operation is reasonable, having regard to the patient’s state at the

time and to all the circumstances of the case. In addition, Section 205 of the Code provides that no person

shall be guilty of the offence of causing by willful act a child to die before it has an independent existence from

its mother if the act was carried out in good faith for the purpose of preserving the mother’s life.



Moreover, Uganda, like a number of Commonwealth countries, whose legal systems are based the English

common law, follows the holding of the 1938 English Rex v. Bourne decision in determining whether an

abortion performed for health reasons is lawful. In the Bourne decision, a physician was acquitted of the

offence of performing an abortion in the case of a woman who had been raped. The court ruled that the

abortion was lawful because it had been performed to prevent the woman from becoming “a physical and

mental wreck”, thus setting a precedent for future abortion cases performed on the grounds of preserving the

pregnant woman’s physical and mental health. The liberalization and legality of abortion in Uganda has been

complicated by the use of rape as a weapon of war and terror by rebel groups in the region.



Illegal abortions are common in Uganda. As a result, there is a high level of maternal mortality, estimated

in 1990 at 1,200 deaths per 100,000 live births. A 1986 study found that 35 per cent of maternal deaths were

linked to complications from unsafe abortion. Induced abortion has been ranked as the second leading cause of

maternal mortality in the main referral hospital in Uganda. Illegal abortion is more prevalent among young

women. A survey carried out in 1988 among women aged 15-24 years found that 23 per cent of all the women

that had ever been pregnant had had one or more abortions. The Government has expressed serious concern

over these trends. The high level of induced abortion among young women in Uganda has led the Government

to establish family life education programmes in primary and secondary schools.



Uganda has a very high total fertility rate, 7.1 children per woman for the period 1995-2000. For the same

period, the population growth rate was 2.8 per cent. In recognition of the negative consequences of rapid

population growth on per capita incomes and social services, the Government launched a comprehensive

population program in 1988 and adopted the National Population Policy for Sustainable Development in 1995.

The main focus of these policies is to strengthen maternal and child health and family planning services and to

expand population and family life education campaigns. One objective was to increase the contraceptive

prevalence rate from 5 to 20 per cent by the year 2000. The modern contraceptive rate was estimated in 1995 to

be 8 per cent.



Contraceptive services in Uganda are available at government clinics and at clinics operated by the Family

Planning Association of Uganda. Increased condom use in the late 1990s was successful in reducing the rate

of HIV/AIDS infection but has not significantly reduced the number of unwanted pregnancies and therefore

abortions.



Source: Population Policy Data Bank maintained by the Population Division of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs of the United Nations

Secretariat. For additional sources, see list of references.

149


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