Abortion in Kyrgyzstan is legal up to 12 weeks in normal cases. This can be extended to 22 weeks for "social reasons" as agreed upon by a health professional. In cases of medical necessity, abortion is legal at any time. [1] However, a majority of Kyrgyzstan's population is opposed to abortion due to it being considered Haram under Islamic law. [2] [3]
As a member state of the Soviet Union, Stalin's law criminalizing abortion was repealed in 1955 and was replaced with a new law that was designed "to encourage motherhood and protect infancy." [4] The decree implied that a majority of women would still seek to have children, and the Soviet government still sought to prevent abortion as much as possible. [5]
There is no exact data on how the re-legalization of abortion in the Soviet Union directly affected the Kirghiz SSR, it is fair to assume that it was similar to the rest of the central Asian republics: most of them denouncing abortion due to it being incomparable with Islamic belief. [6] The Kirghiz SSR was predominantly Muslim, [7] which considers abortion as Haram. [3] [8]
Since the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the rate of abortion in Kyrgyzstan has declined 66%, decreasing from 90 abortions per 1,000 women in 1990 to just 31 as of 2021. [9] The country is a member of the Organization of Islamic Conferences, and is one of the few members to allow unrestricted abortion. [10] 2015 research by the Ministry of Health of the Kyrgyz Republic put the figure of abortions per 1,000 births at 140.6. [11]
While abortion is legal in Kyrgyzstan, due to the prevalence of Muslims in the country, many doctors have expressed concern about performing such operations. One female doctor in Osh told a researcher with the University of Minnesota said that she no longer counsels women about abortion options, nor does she perform them as "she now feels afraid to do so." [12] Most women face social pressure to not get an abortion, due to the rising influence of Islam in the country. [13] [14]
Abortion is not mentioned in Kyrgyzstan's constitution, although it does state that women and men will have "equal rights and freedoms and equal opportunities for their realization." [15]
The official law on abortion, called the Law on Reproductive Rights of Citizens, legalizes abortion on a number of cases. It states in part that technology must be developed to help protect reproductive rights, and that abortion should be provided in the event that a woman wishes to terminate her pregnancy. [16]
According to the United Nations, abortion is legal in Kyrgyzstan in cases of saving a women's life, saving her physical health, and saving her mental health. The same report states that the rate of abortion in Kyrgyzstan per 1,000 women is 12.4 as of 2011. A majority of the population, however, views abortion as immoral. [2] Kyrgyzstan is a Muslim-majority country, and thus the social ideas of the population are shaped by the religion. [17]