Teenage pregnancy, abortion and consent
Dear Editor,
As I see it the birth of a child is a special occasion, but the birth of a child to a child ought to be more sobering than celebratory.
It is rather ironic that state minister Juliet Cuthbert Flynn has found herself in this situation — inadvertently participating in the celebration of the birth of twins to a 14-year-old mother on Christmas Day — for two reasons.
Firstly, almost two years ago Minister Cuthbert Flynn was touting the research done by the Caribbean Policy Research Institute (CaPRI) on abortion as ammunition against the current law against abortion. At the time CaPRI recommended that teens who get pregnant should be able to access taxpayer-funded abortions without parental consent. This means that if Minister Cuthbert Flynn’s abortion proposal had become law, in the brief moments that this 14-year-old mother of twins described her pregnancy as “unwelcomed”, she could have had a clear and legal pathway to an abortion at the nearest clinic without her parents’ knowledge.
Interestingly, because her parents were made aware of the situation, they both stepped in to offer support and encouragement to her. Suddenly, what some may have labelled a crisis pregnancy was relieved of the crisis. And Minister Cuthbert Flynn ended up celebrating the birth of twins that may have been aborted if it were legal.
Secondly, it is interesting that less than a month after the debate raged in the public sphere regarding increasing the age of consent, this situation has arisen. It seems to be a parody of the need for the discussion itself. Are we really to believe that a 14-year-old giving birth to twins is horrible but a 16-year-old giving birth to twins is good? Clearly it’s better than 14, but 16-year-olds are immature and are certainly not ready to take on the supremely important role of being parents. Consent for sex is consent for pregnancy and parenting and the reality is that children should not be having sex, making babies, or becoming parents.
The Centre for the Investigation of Sexual Offences and Child Abuse (CISOCA) should certainly be called on to investigate cases like these. In any case, we ought to be proud of this new mother for choosing life and gratitude, but at the same time the message to our children must be clear, teenagers should be focused on personal development and their academic pursuits rather than on sexual experimentation and parenting. The new year would be better for it.
Dr Daniel Thomas
President
Love March Movement