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Greek novelist and lawyer are the first same-sex couple to wed at Athens city hall
2024-03-08 00:00:00.0     欧洲新闻电视台-欧洲新闻     原网页

       

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       More than 230 million women and girls around the world have now undergone female genital mutilation, most of whom live in Africa, according to a report issued on Friday by the United Nations children's agency.

       In the last eight years, some 30 million people have undergone the procedure, in which external genitalia are partially or fully removed, UNICEF estimated in the report, which was released on International Women's Day.

       The percentage of women and girls who experience female genital mutilation is declining, UNICEF said, but it warned that efforts to eradicate the practice are too slow to keep up with fast-growing populations.

       "The practice of female genital mutilation is declining, but not fast enough," the report said.

       The German UNICEF headquarters in Cologne. HERMANN J. KNIPPERTZ/Copyright 2024 The AP. All rights reserved.

       So-called "female circumcision" is in some areas incorrectly believed to control women's sexuality.

       Girls are subjected to the procedure at ages ranging from infancy to adolescence. It is extremely dangerous, and can cause serious bleeding and even death; in the long term, it can lead to urinary tract infections, menstrual problems, pain, decreased sexual satisfaction and childbirth complications, as well as depression, low self-esteem and post-traumatic stress disorder.

       Some 144 million women and girls have been through female genital mutilation in Africa alone, followed by Asia and the Middle East with 80 million and 6 million respectively, the report said. Somalia tops the list of countries where the practice, also known as female circumcision, is prevalent, with 99% of the female population between the ages of 15 and 49 having been circumcised.

       Burkina Faso made the most significant progress, reducing the proportion of women between 15 and 49 who were circumcised from 80% to 30% over three decades.

       Nonetheless, the number of victims is rising. "We're also seeing a worrying trend that more girls are subjected to the practice at younger ages, many before their fifth birthday. That further reduces the window to intervene," said UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell.

       A Masai girl at an anti-female genital mutilation protest in Kilgoris, Kenya. SAYYID AZIM/AP2007

       The report also showed that 4 in every 10 survivors live in conflict-torn countries with high population growth rates, adding that political instability disrupts efforts to prevent the practice and provide support to victims.

       "Ethiopia, Nigeria and Sudan account for the largest numbers of girls and women who have undergone female genital mutilation in conflict-affected countries," the report said.

       Although the report hailed the progress made in some countries, it warned that the world is falling short of what would be needed to meet the U.N.'s goal of eradicating the practice globally by 2030.

       "In some countries, progress would need to be 10 times faster than the best progress observed in history in order to reach the target by 2030," said the report.

       Nimco Ali, CEO of the Five Foundation, a UK-based charity that fights female genital mutilation, said the UNICEF estimates were "shocking" and "devastating," and more funding is urgently needed to end the practice.

       "We must use the last six years of this decade to finally get to grips with this abhorrent abuse of a girl's human rights and save the next generation from the horrors of FGM," the Somali-born activist, author and female genital mutilation survivor said in a press release.

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       A Greek novelist and his partner, a lawyer, became the first same-sex couple to get married in Athens’ city hall since the country legalised same-sex marriages three weeks ago in a major change for the Orthodox Christian nation.

       The civil wedding between Petros Hadjopoulos, who writes under the pen name Auguste Corteau, and lawyer Anastasios Samouilidis was celebrated by Athens’ mayor on Thursday. Two dozen guests attended the event in the Greek capital’s city hall.

       Hadjopoulos described the event as “a dream that we didn’t dare entertain when we were in our teens”. He said there was a certain “symbolism” in their gesture.

       “I understand that [marriage] doesn’t work for everyone, but for people who grew up in Greece in the 1980s and 90s, when guys like us lived a very lonely existence, even symbols have a great value,” he said.

       Athens’ mayor Haris Doukas described the ceremony as a “historic moment,” adding that “every citizen of Athens [...] should be able to live and love in the way they choose”.

       Lawyer Anastasios Samouilidis, left, hugs his husband, Greek author Petros Hadjopoulos, who uses the pen name Auguste Corteau, as guests watch, after their wedding in Athens.AP Photo/Michael Varaklas

       Same-sex marriage was legalised by the Greek parliament with a vote on February 15 despite strong opposition from the socially conservative Orthodox Church. On Tuesday, Church officials on the island of Corfu imposed a religious ban on two local lawmakers who voted for the reform.

       The recently passed law also gives full parental rights to married same-sex partners with children, though it doesn’t allow same-sex couples to use surrogacy in Greece.

       Same-sex marriage is still far from being legalised in much of the European Union. Several member countries – including Bulgaria, Croatia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland and Slovakia – currently have constitutional provisions against it.

       Same-sex marriage is currently legal in the following European countries: Spain, Andorra, Portugal, France, Luxembourg, the UK, Iceland, Norway, the Netherlands, Finland, Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Belgium, Austria, Slovenia, Switzerland, Malta, Estonia and Greece.

       Several others allow legal recognition for some form of civil union or partnership.

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       Marta, Anna, Jusyna, Beata, Iza, Joanna, Izabela, Alicija, Dorota. These are just some of the names of women who have died in Poland due to an almost total ban on abortion.

       This ban has a devastating impact on many women and their families. And yet, Poland was one of the first European countries to introduce legal rights to abortion back in 1932.

       This striking turnaround didn’t happen overnight. It happened gradually, starting in the 1990s, and by 2020 an almost total ban was passed by the Constitutional Court in a decision that is generally perceived as politically motivated and is in discord with the majority of Polish people who support abortion in all or most circumstances.

       It shows how quickly reproductive rights can be threatened, and that every generation needs to fight for them all over again.

       Around the world, women’s control of their bodies is being undermined. The decision by the US Supreme Court in June 2022 to overturn the rights afforded women by Roe vs Wade was a seismic shift but elsewhere, away from the glare of publicity, reproductive rights are threatened by attacks that are more subtle – but just as insidious.

       The UK has seen a sharp increase in prosecutions of women for suspected illegal abortions, with as many women convicted in the 18 months to February as in the previous 55 years.

       While countries such as Poland have taken legislative and other steps to significantly reduce women’s rights, a number of others still regulate abortion primarily through their penal or criminal codes.

       This prioritises rules around what can and can’t be done legally, potentially putting women and those who assist them, at risk of committing criminal offences, rather than treating abortion like all other medical services, which are focused on meeting an individual’s healthcare needs.

       France's parliament officially approves law to enshrine abortion rights in the constitution Women's rights activists launch effort to expand abortion rights to EU level

       Many EU countries restrict access through economic and practical hurdles, including highly restrictive timeframes to access abortion, obligatory non-medical steps such as counselling and waiting times, and financial requirements, eg excluding abortion from insurance and free healthcare provision.

       After Roe v Wade was overturned, the European Parliament reacted to the situation by MEPs passing a resolution in 2022 calling for the European Council to enshrine “the right to safe and legal abortion” in the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights.

       But this resolution and other statements by visible EU functionaries didn’t lead to much concrete action.

       We're putting women's lives at risk

       Abortion laws in Poland and Malta remain the strictest, in addition, many countries still have provisions in place that make access for women very difficult.

       Germany and Belgium, for example, require medically unnecessary procedures, such as counselling and a waiting period, before abortion can be accessed.

       In Italy, women struggle to find doctors willing to carry out abortions due to laws that provide for a “conscientious objector” status, which has been adopted by around two-thirds of doctors.

       These provisions disproportionately disadvantage women with limited resources, and those in difficult circumstances, for example, young women or people with pre-existing or pregnancy-related illnesses.

       Women walk towards an office building in Madrid, May 2022 AP Photo/Paul White

       In Spain, where conscientious objection among physicians is also high in some regions, women are often forced to travel long distances in search of a doctor who will carry out the procedure they need.

       Although abortion is possible within the first three months of pregnancy in Austria, it is not covered by health insurance, leaving women to cover the €300 to €1,000 themselves.

       Italy’s pro-life groups trying to force women seeking abortions to listen to ‘foetal heartbeat’ Germany tries to stop pro-life demonstrators harassing women seeking abortions

       These provisions disproportionately disadvantage women with limited resources, and those in difficult circumstances, for example, young women or people with pre-existing or pregnancy-related illnesses.

       Needless to say, this situation causes needless suffering and is putting women’s health, and lives, at risk.

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       Things might get worse post-European elections

       Abortion and reproductive rights have rarely been high up the agenda of the EU and the EU elections.

       However, it seems that might change in the run-up to the European ballot in June this year.

       Current projections indicate a surge in strength for the far-right which often has anti-abortion positions in their agenda, building on recent electoral wins in the Netherlands, Italy, Finland and Sweden.

       Recent polling shows that the majority of EU citizens support access to abortion for women in all or most situations, but this is not enough on its own to ensure those rights are protected.

       People hug each other after French lawmakers approved a bill that will enshrine a woman’s right to an abortion in the French Constitution, in Paris, March 2024 AP Photo/Oleg Cetinic

       On the other hand, recent successes, such as the vote in France to enshrine women’s right to an abortion in the Constitution, are positive.

       The stark reality is that well-funded internationally connected neoconservative actors that take their steps from the same playbook are trying to erode existing rights all across Europe.

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       Poland’s pro-EU coalition introduces bill aimed at legalising abortions up to 12 weeks of pregnancy ‘Dark money’ fuelling 'retrograde' anti-abortion activity in UK

       Recent polling shows that the majority of EU citizens support access to abortion for women in all or most situations, but this is not enough on its own to ensure those rights are protected.

       All of this has brought activists together from across the EU to launch the My Voice, My Choice European Citizens' Initiative, or ECI.

       An EU mechanism could be the solution

       An ECI allows any citizens in the EU to gather signatures in support of a cause, and to put their proposal to the European Commission for consideration.

       To qualify, initiatives must be supported by 1 million or more people from at least seven EU countries within the specified timeframe. It is the only mechanism by which EU citizens can call on the European Commission to propose new legislation.

       My Voice, My Choice is a grassroots coalition for reproductive rights, bringing together committed individuals and organisations to argue for action to be taken to turn support for abortion rights into reality for all women in the EU.

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       Every woman should have the right to make informed decisions about her body without facing unnecessary barriers or endangering her health and well-being, based on the understanding that the right to choose is a common value.

       People protest Poland's restrictive abortion law in Warsaw, June 2023 AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski

       We are proposing the creation of a fund that will support member states in providing safe and accessible abortion care to all who need it in accordance with their laws.

       The fund will support the creation of safe and accessible abortion services in areas where this is needed and also enable women in need of abortion services to travel across EU borders if necessary.

       Dozens of Hungarian women travel to Austria for abortions every week, amid tightening laws Malta votes to ease total abortion ban but pro-choice groups brand the new law 'a betrayal'

       We are waiting for the European Commission to register our initiative so that we can start collecting signatures.

       Citizens of Europe have a chance to speak up

       The campaign is rooted in the belief that every woman should have the right to make informed decisions about her body without facing unnecessary barriers or endangering her health and well-being, based on the understanding that the right to choose is a common value.

       It is the absence of a ban; it is neither an instruction nor a guideline. It is only an option that is given to every woman.

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       It is a fundamental principle of public health that does not differentiate between individuals. It's an open space where a woman is free to decide so that in the end she can say: "This was my decision."

       The My Voice, My Choice overall goal is to safeguard and advance abortion rights across Europe, ensuring that all women have access to the safe, respectful, and legal healthcare services they deserve.

       We cannot take the right to safe access to abortion for granted. That is why our message on this year's International Women's Day is that we the citizens of Europe have a chance to speak up, to let our voices be heard and that we demand the protection of women’s rights today and into the future.

       Nika Kova? is the founding director of the 8th of March Research Institute, a movement-building organization that uses storytelling and advocacy to confront gender and economic inequalities.

       At Euronews, we believe all views matter. Contact us at view@euronews.com to send pitches or submissions and be part of the conversation.

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标签:综合
关键词: abortion     same-sex     rights     female genital mutilation     abortions     International Women's Day     countries    
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