Christine,

I join others in thanking you for fighting on behalf of our mothers,
sisters, nieces, aunts, great aunts who suffer each and everytime they have
to bring life into this world. You are not just fighting for the women alone
but for the young children and us men - the fathers, husbands, brothers,
uncles, nephews who undergo enormous periods of stress and depression when
their loved ones have to go through the agony of labour knowing very well
that their chances of survival are at best 50 percent.

I am almost certain that nearly all of us have witnessed cases where an
expectant mother dies while in labour and the horrific aftermath that comes
with it: body is not burried if dowry has not been paid; fingers being
pointed and innocent people being accused of bewitching/poisoning the
expectant mother when clearly it is a failure of our health care system
in taking care of these expectant mothers.
Your initiative deserves utmost support from everyone!

As I write, roumors has it that the healthcare workers in Koboko Health
centre were on strike and obviously this has put stress on many people in
the district as well as surrounding areas of Maracha, Aringa, South Sudan
and DR Congo. Not to mention the stress and agony of those of us in far away
places either in Uganda, Sudan or overseas with aging parents who have to
rely on the health centre for basic services such as monitoring their
diabetics.

Unfortunately my WNNET mail has been going to SPAM so I did not receive the
Press release attachment.

Please send it once again.

Charles
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Ayikoru <[email protected]>
Date: Mon, Apr 11, 2011 at 6:35 AM
Subject: Re: [WestNileNet] maternal mortality case
To: A Virtual Network for friends of West Nile <[email protected]>


Dear Christine,

Thanks very much indeed for giving priority to this fundamental issue faced
by current and prospective mothers in Uganda. Whether or not there were MDGs
to be achieved, the state of our healthcare in general and maternal
healthcare in particular, is completely unacceptable!

Let's hope the human rights perspective taken by your team will go along way
into delivering an historic constitutional pronouncement on the right to
maternal healthcare and the role of stakeholders in ensuring this right is
respected. But then, how far can a legal pronouncement go in addressing the
current situation when the need to survive far exceeds the altruism that
ought to underpin professional healthcare provision? The Courts of Law may
order compensation to victims or even fair remuneration packages for
healthcare professionals (I doubt the latter). But they cannot order service
providers to be empathetic with their patients or clients or customers.
Empathy, sense of guilt/shame or altruism are things that we have
increasingly expunged from our inner selves, hence some of our common
failings (healthcare, education, lack of accountability in the public sphere
etc).

Nevertheless, I remain hopeful that initiatives such as the current petition
to the Constitutional Court and our collective actions may in the long run
improve the situation.

Thanks very much indeed to you and the team of Lawyers for taking this up,
let us know if we could add our voices or contribute in any constructive
way.

Kind regards,

Maureen

Sent from my iPhone

On 8 Apr 2011, at 11:26, Christine Munduru <[email protected]> wrote:

> Dear members please read through the CSO press release attached about the
on going case of  the death of  our sisters from Arua and Mityana Hospitals.
I had earlier on informed you that these cases will be taken to court and
the process has started. The Dean faculty of law makerere University and
Professor Joe Oloka have joined the case in addition to the other lawyers.
CSOs are mobilizing support for the case and it will be good for us to join
at our own various  levels because this is intended to adress the policy
issues surrounding the deaths of women during delivery. From our research in
preparation for these cases,  Arua regional hospital is leading in maternal
deaths in the country and  Uganda is one of the leading countries in
maternal deaths in Africa and is very far from acheiving MDG 5. This is one
of the reasons I strongly feel that these cases should be tried in court to
showcase government what is happening. I would particularly urge the women
who are so vulner
 able during birth to join this cause, tomorrow may be you or me, sister,
mother or daughter if we dont stand up to adress from the root course.
>
> Thanks
>
> Christine
> <Press Release on Maternal Health Petition - FINAL.doc>
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