A/HRC/43/48
26.
The Special Rapporteur and other special procedure mandate holders have also
expressed concern about the imposition of restrictive garments or “modest” dress codes by
laws inspired by religious beliefs and the impact of such measures on the ability of women
and girls to enjoy their human rights. In 2019, in a communication to the Government of the
Islamic Republic of Iran, the Special Rapporteur, along with other special procedure mandate
holders, expressed concern about the Government’s compulsory veil legislation and the
reported arrest, enforced disappearance and arbitrary detention of women’s human rights
defenders who protested against it. 16 In that communication, special procedure mandate
holders recalled a recent recommendation to the Government to reject any cultural or
religious practice that violated human rights and the principle of equality or prevented the
establishment of an egalitarian society free of gender-based discrimination.
27.
In other instances, consultation participants noted that some States had opted to limit
religious practices such as wearing headscarves or full-face veils in public – attire
predominantly worn by Muslim women – in their efforts to combat gender-based
discrimination, but without sufficient attention to the self-understanding and agency of
women.17 Critics of such policies have noted the danger that such policies posed to the right
to freedom of religion or belief, along with myriad other rights, noting that efforts to combat
gender-based discrimination often failed to incorporate freedom of religion or belief and
forced individuals to choose between their faith and national protections for human rights.
5.
State restrictions on access to sexual and reproductive rights
28.
The Special Rapporteur notes that, in a number of countries around the world,
Governments continue to maintain partial or total bans on access to abortion, and religious
figures have both encouraged those measures and advocated against efforts to reform the
laws. At the consultations on Latin America, it was asserted that discriminatory religious
edicts informed laws and policies that restricted sexual and reproductive rights in the region,
including, but not limited to, partial or total bans on access to abortion and contraception,
prohibitions on assisted reproductive technologies and gender reassignment surgery, and
limits on the provision of evidence-based sexuality education.
29.
It was noted that four States in the region enforced complete bans on abortion, in two
States women and girls could be prosecuted for miscarrying their pregnancies, 18 and
limitations in other countries had seriously limited women’s access to abortion in
circumstances in which denying it caused serious suffering. Three quarters of abortions in
the region are reportedly unsafe due to legal impediments to safe access, resulting in high
rates of preventable maternal mortality in Argentina, Bolivia (Plurinational State of), Brazil,
Paraguay, Peru and Venezuela (Bolivarian Republic of). 19
30.
Consultation participants also reported that restrictive laws on access to abortion and
contraception in sub-Saharan Africa were mostly inherited from pre-independence colonial
laws, but were maintained, in part, owing to pressure from certain religious groups.
Approximately 13.2 per cent of maternal deaths in the region can be attributed to unsafe
abortion.20
31.
Participants in the consultations on South and South-East Asia reported that, in the
Philippines, the criminalization of abortion and a lack of access to contraception were often
justified by reference to religious postulates. The Committee on the Elimination of
Discrimination against Women also concluded that religion was the basis for sexual and
reproductive health policies, including at the level of local government units, given that the
Constitution required the State to “equally protect the life of the mother and the life of the
unborn from [the time of] conception” (CEDAW/C/OP.8/PHL/1).
16
17
18
19
20
See communication IRN 5/2019.
See www.ohchr.org/Documents/Issues/Women/WRGS/VeilinEuropereport.pdf.
See www.guttmacher.org/fact-sheet/abortion-latin-america-and-caribbean.
Ibid.
See www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/preventing-unsafe-abortion.
7