How Zika became a women's problem
As Zika spreads throughout the hemisphere, it’s becoming abundantly clear that many Latin American governments view the public health crisis as a women’s problem.
From Colombian condom-distribution campaigns targeting women, to El Salvador’s addle-brained attempt to discourage all new pregnancies until some magical date in 2018, Latin America’s response to the problem has underscored a general incompetency and systemic misogyny that has long corrupted public policies in the hemisphere.
There has been very little messaging targeting men to tell them what they should be doing differently in response to the Zika scare. And PSAs targeting women have not been accompanied by adequate efforts to provide expanded health services related to sexual and reproductive rights, making calls to avoid pregnancy a message without echo.
“Zika has served as a reminder of just how bad the issue of reproductive rights is in much of Latin America,” says Maria Alejandra Cardenas, legal director at the advocacy group Women’s Link International. “We see governments coming out asking women to postpone their pregnancies as if they’re the only ones involved in the reproductive process.”
“The reality here is men will go into a brothel and expect the women to have condoms. Clearly if we want this campaign to work we need to make women aware.” — Joao Herrera, mayor of Soldedad, Colombia, on why his condom-distribution campaign is targeting women.
At the same time, the Zika crisis and its frightening link to babies born with microcephaly is creating a new opportunity to reexamine discriminatory policies against women—especially when it comes to the region’s draconian restrictions on sexual reproductive rights.
In Brazil, lawyers and activists are preparing a legal motion to expand current abortion laws to cover instances of Zika-related microcephaly. And in El Salvador, the Central American country most afflicted by Zika and one most backwards places on earth when it comes to protecting women’s sexual reproductive rights, there’s suddenly a renewed urgency to push the National Assembly to repeal the country’s total abortion ban.
“There’s already a joke here that mosquitoes have become feminists’ greatest ally in the fight to decriminalize abortion,” says Morena Herrera, El Salvador’s longtime women’s right champion and former FMLN congresswoman.
Other countries remain unmoved by the crisis. In Dominican Republic, where late last year a high court blocked a new law that would have decriminalized abortions in instances when a woman’s life is at risk, activists can only hope that Zika will spur the government to respond sensibly.
Dominican abortion activist Sergia Galvan says pregnant women facing complications due to Zika will be forced to get back-alley abortions under unsafe circumstances, making the health scare even more onerous on women.