Iran's parliament is expected to impose a ban on vasectomies and tighten abortion rules, and to restrict access to contraceptives. The moves are part of a stated drive to raise the country’s population from 77 million to 200 million.
Two separate bills are being considered by the country’s
parliament. One, meant to increase fertility rates, will ban
surgeries intended for permanent contraception, except in cases
involving serious threats to women's health. Strict punishments
will be imposed on doctors found to be involved in such surgeries
after the proposed ban. State funding for birth control programs,
which previously provided subsidies for modern contraceptives,
will be abolished.
The second proposed legislation would make it a real challenge
for women to seek divorce, Amnesty International wrote in its report,
citing provisions of the law, which, it says instructs employers
to prioritize married women with children when hiring for certain
jobs.
The new legislation marks the sharpest turn yet away from Iran's
previous birth control policy, dubbed: “Two children is
enough.” The move comes after the country’s supreme leader,
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said in a televised speech in 2012 that
Iran's existing family planning was an imitation of western
lifestyles.
A decree issued by Khamenei in May 2014 called for producing more
children in order to “strengthen national identity.”
The supreme leader has repeatedly urged Iranians to help increase
the country's population, which he described as aging. "If we
move forward like this, we will be a country of elderly people in
a not too distant future," Khamenei said in October,
according to the semi-official Fars news agency. "Why do some
[couples] prefer to have one … or two children? Why do men or
women avoid having children through different means?" the
Iranian leader wondered.
Although nearly 70 percent of the country's 77 million people are
under 35 years of age, the population growth has been slowing.
READ MORE: Iran bans permanent contraception, birth control ads
Iran's birth control program offered subsidized vasectomies, free
condoms and low-cost contraceptives. There were educational
programs on sexual health and family planning.
Iran's Minister of Health Seyed Hassan Hashemi warned on his website
that the proposed bill may generate negative health outcomes,
including “more illegal and clandestine abortions, recurrent
infections in women, and other serious physical and mental
harms.”
Two proposed laws "pose a major threat to the human rights
and fundamental freedoms of women and girls in Iran,"
Amnesty International has warned in its report. It said the bills
are being considered by the authorities at a time when the female
population is "already suffering increased discrimination and
violence."
According to the human rights group, there's been a steady
decline in the country’s fertility rate – from 7.0 births per
woman in 1980 to 5.5 in 1988, 2.8 in 1996 and 1.85 in 2014.
"The Bill to Increase Fertility Rates and Prevent Population
Decline threatens women’s right to sexual and reproductive
health," Amnesty warns.
The World Health Organization (WHO) has meanwhile questioned the
assumption that restricted access to contraception necessarily
leads to increased birth rates. In countries where abortion is
restricted, women are forced to resort to illegal practices,
risking their lives. According to the WHO, the first step for
avoiding maternal deaths is to ensure that women have access to
contraception and safe abortion.