The Russian government has enacted a law requiring abortion ads to
carry health warnings about the procedure.
Lawmakers say that the ads
presently mislead the public by creating the impression that abortion is
a simple surgery with no health risks.
The new amendments require that warnings about the dangers, including
loss of fertility, should occupy at minimum 10 percent of each
advertisement, the Russian news agency RIA
Novosti reports.
President Dimitry Medvedev signed the bill into law on July 14.
Russia has one of the world’s highest abortion rates. More than one
million women have abortions every year.
In 2007 there were 1.5 million
abortions, a number almost equal to the number of children born.
Parliament member Viktor Zvagelsky said the Russian abortion situation was “depressing,” RIA said.
Besides the human costs involved, the high abortion rate also contributes to a worsening demographic crisis.
Russia’s population dropped from 145 million in 2002 to under 143
million, the 2010 census found.
The death rate continues to exceed the
birth rate despite government efforts to encourage Russians to have more
children.
The United Nations predicts that by 2050 Russia’s population will
have declined to 116 million, a decrease of almost 20 percent.
It says
overcoming racism and taking in more migrants could help the country
boost its population, Reuters reports.
Health experts say key factors in Russia’s population decline are
poor diet, heavy drinking by men, a heroin abuse-related HIV/AIDS
epidemic and a high number of violent deaths.
The Orthodox Church has increasing influence and has called for tougher restrictions on abortion.
The parliament may soon pass a new bill that could limit access to
abortion procedures and toughen punishments for doctors who carry out
illegal abortions.
It would also allow mothers of newborns who are
unwilling or unable to keep their babies to leave them anonymously in
special adoption centers.
The Soviet Union was the first country in the world to legalize
abortion on demand in 1920.
Joseph Stalin outlawed abortion from 1936
until his death in 1954 to try to boost the birth rate.
The communist Soviet Union encouraged new births with prizes and
money, but Russia’s population has steadily declined since the USSR’s
breakup in 1991.