Colombia
The political impetus around the women's human rights agenda
that was generated by the 1991 constitutional process continued after the
constitution's passage. According to PROFAMILIA, "the new political will, the
incorporation of new groups in the Government, and the networking of feminist
groups" led to further changes, as women's NGOs successfully lobbied the
Government to adopt new programmes with a gender perspective. One of the most
important of these was the policy issued by the Ministry of Public Health in
1992, entitled "Health for Women, Women for Health."
The Convention has helped provide the framework for the new
health policy through its conceptualisation of health as a human rights issue.
Article 12 of CEDAW requires the State to "eliminate discrimination against
women in the field of health care in order to ensure, on a basis of equality
between men and women, access to health care services, including those related
to family planning." The State must also provide appropriate services in
relation to pregnancy (CEDAW, article 12.2); provide educational information to
women about family health and family planning (CEDAW, article 10); and ensure
that women have equal rights with men to determine the number and spacing of
their children, as well as having access to information and the means to make
these decisions (CEDAW, article 16). In addition, the CEDAW Committee's General
Recommendation on violence against women identifies coercion in relation to
fertility and reproduction as a violation of women's human rights.
The Colombian constitution includes several key provisions
regarding women's health that were modelled after the rights contained in the
Women's Convention. The constitution guarantees women the right to found a
family, to choose the number of children they will have, to have access to
health education and information, to the enjoyment of a healthy environment, and
to health care. The Colombian Health Policy elaborates upon and extends these
entitlements by setting out a detailed programme of women's health rights.
PROFAMILIA has summarised these rights in the following way:
· The right to a
joyful maternity, which includes a freely decided, wished, and safe pregnancy,
· The right to humanised medical
treatment, meaning that a woman's body, her fears, intimacy, and privacy needs
should be treated with dignity and respect.
· The right to be treated as an
integrated person and not as a biological reproducer by the health services.
· The right to have access to
integrated health services which respond to women's specific needs, taking into
consideration special characteristics such as age, activities, economic needs,
race, and place of origin.
· The right to have access to
education that fosters self-care and self-knowledge of the body, promoting
self-esteem and empowerment.
· The right to receive
information and counselling that promotes the exercise of a free, gratifying,
and responsible sexuality, not necessarily conditioned to pregnancy.
· The right to have access to
sufficient and appropriate information and counselling and to modern and safe
contraceptives.
· The right to have working and
living conditions and environments that do not affect women's fertility or
health.
· The right not to be
discriminated against in the work place or in educational institutions on the
basis of pregnancy, number of children, or marital status.
· The right that biological
processes such as menstruation, pregnancy, birth, menopause, and old age be
considered as natural events and not as illness.
· The right to receive value and
respect for cultural knowledge and practices related to women's health.
· The right to have an active
and protagonist participation in the community and Governmental decision-making
levels of the health system.
· The right to have access to
public health services that take care of battered women and victims of all forms
of violence.
(from: "CEDAW, Colombia and
Reproductive Rights," at 5-6)
The overarching principle that informs the Colombian health
policy is its recognition of the importance of women's active involvement. The
policy stresses that all women have the right to be active participants in
decisions that affect their health, lives, bodies, and sexuality. The policy
sets out basic measures - that depend on women's agency - for ending
discrimination against women in health care. Women must be empowered, so that
the exercise of their rights is guaranteed; women must be afforded equal
opportunities; pluralism and differences must be respected; health care must
emphasise both women's freedom and privacy; and the social participation of
women in active roles must be
facilitated.