http://news.kuwaittimes.net/2012/12/17/philippines-to-pass-birth-control-bill-congressman/

Philippines to pass birth control bill: Congressman 
 
MANILA: Filipino women and supporters wave at a convoy of a congressman as they 
celebrate after hearing news that Philippine legislators passed a landmark law 
that would provide government funding for contraceptives and sexuality classes 
during a demonstration outside the Philippine Congress in suburban Quezon City, 
north of Manila, Philippines yesterday. — AP

MANILA: Philippine legislators were yesterday poised to pass landmark birth 
control laws paving the way for increased sex education and free 
contraceptives, despite lobbying by the Catholic church, the bill’s author 
said. The Philippine Senate is due to vote on the Reproductive Health Bill 
during its crucial second reading, while the House of Representatives will vote 
for the third and final time late Monday, said Congressman Edcel Lagman. Lagman 
said he was confident the bill would be approved by both the House and the 
Senate, which each need to pass it in three readings-the third of which is 
largely seen as a formality. “We are sure it will pass (in the Senate.)

We expect the margin of victory to be wider in the House,” he told AFP, despite 
angry campaigning from the Catholic church in the nation of 100 million, where 
70 percent of the population are followers. Bishops across the country have 
argued that laws allowing increased sex education and the handing out of 
contraception will encourage pre-marital sex and lead to the legalisation of 
abortion. The bill will be signed into law by President Benigno Aquino if both 
houses of parliament agree on a common version. Lagman, who has been pushing 
family planning legislation for more than a decade, said he was confident the 
two chambers would reach agreement.

He shrugged off intense lobbying by the Catholic church, including warnings 
that bishops would campaign against advocates of the bill in next year’s 
elections. “It’s more of a threat than a reality. The experience in other 
Catholic countries is once a law is passed on reproductive health, even the 
Catholic church became silent and supports the law,” he said.

The bill is seen as a way of moderating the country’s population growth, 
reducing poverty and bringing down the high maternal mortality rate. “The key 
provision is the prioritisation of the poor and marginalised sectors who really 
need information and services of reproductive health,” Lagman said. Bishops 
campaigned against the proposals at the weekend, reading a pastoral letter to 
congregations across the country during Mass, saying: “The wide and free 
accessibility of contraceptives, even to the youth, will result in the 
destruction of family life and in greater violence against women.” — AFP


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