The Philippines’ highest court yesterday approved a controversial birth-control law that supporters said would transform the lives of millions of poor Filipinos, in a stunning defeat for the powerful Catholic Church.
“The RH [Reproductive Health] Law is not unconstitutional,” Philippine Supreme Court spokesman Theodore Te told reporters, announcing a ruling that struck down more than a dozen petitions against the law by church groups.
The law requires government health centers to hand out free condoms and birth control pills, as well as mandating that sex education be taught in schools.
The law also requires that public health workers receive family planning training, while post-abortion medical care is also legalized.
The Catholic Church had until Tuesday led a successful campaign for more than 15 years against any form of family planning laws in the Philippines.
Philippine President Benigno Aquino III defied church pressure and signed the law into effect in December 2012, but the Supreme Court quickly suspended it after church groups filed petitions arguing it was unconstitutional.
“This monumental decision upholds the separation of church and state, and affirms the supremacy of the government in secular concerns like health and socioeconomic development,” Philippine Legislator Edcel Lagman, the principal author of the law, said immediately after the verdict. “A grateful nation salutes the majority of justices for their favorable ruling promoting reproductive health and giving impetus to sustainable human development.”
The Catholic Church, which counts more than 80 percent of the country’s 100 million population as members, had led street protests denouncing the law as “evil,” and at one point in its opposition campaign threatened Aquino with excommunication.
One of its hardline opponents and a petitioner to the court, former Philippine senator Francisco Tatad, said allowing the law to take effect could force Catholics into an open revolt.
“This means civil disobedience at the very least, actual revolt at the most extreme,” Tatad wrote in a commentary in the Manila Times yesterday. “Some of us will want to defy the power of the devil and die as martyrs, if need be, in the only cause that gives us a chance to fight for something much bigger than ourselves.”
Church leaders have helped lead two revolutions that toppled unpopular presidents in recent Philippine history, and they continue to insist they have a right to influence the parliamentary and legal branches of government.
Another example of its enduring influence is that the Philippines is the only country where divorce remains illegal.
Nevertheless, many people across the sprawling archipelago have embraced less conservative views in recent decades.
A recent survey carried by the respected Social Weather Stations polling group said about 84 percent of Filipinos agreed that the government should provide free family planning options, such as contraceptives.
It said 72 percent were “in favor” of the law.
Women’s rights groups and other supporters of the law say it will be a powerful tool in fighting poverty and cutting the birth rate of 3.54, one of the highest in the world.
More than a quarter of the population live on the equivalent of US$0.62 a day, according to the government, and experts say there is an urgent need to provide free reproductive medical services that the poor cannot otherwise afford.
More than a third of the capital’s 14 million population live in sprawling slums, according to a 2010 WHO report, and many of them do not have access to proper sanitation, let alone health centers.
According to the British medical charity Merlin, which has backed the passage of the law, 14 or 15 mothers die daily in the Philippines in complications related to child birth.
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