A month after a reckless night of fun, her periods go missing and the
young man responsible gets a chilling ‘baby, we need to talk’ text
message.
This is when reality and deep regret check in. That is the time the
two lovebirds realise they are barely 20 years old, unemployed and with a
baby on the way. What will they tell their parents? Never mind that
college students treat pregnancy tests like STDs, such that when the
result is positive, then it is a negative — bad. With all this factors
at play, only one solution remains — abortion.
So far, one rural university has the dubious honor of being the
national leader in rampant cases of abortion. Instances of multiple
abortions by the same students are no longer worthy of the spotlight.
Winnie, a student in the said institution, procured her first
abortion in her first year of studies. She was fearful of her father who
is an ex-military tough. Her boyfriend jilted her, and she was left
with no choice. Earlier this year, she found out that she was heavy with
a child, and ‘flushed’ it, again.
Pills
“If you are a girl in this university and you haven’t procured an
abortion, then you deserve a pat on the back,” says Patience, a student
of Law. More frightening, Patience says Medicine students help their
desperate friends who get unwanted pregnancies to get rid of the
baggage.
“These students hook you up with a nurse who then takes you to see a
certain doctor who sorts you out,” she says, adding that in some cases,
the students are known to pinch abortion pills from the hospital and
sell them for Sh2,000, which is pocket-friendly compared to the doctor
who asks for Sh5,000. The price, she says, is not standard, though. It
depends on the pills and the age of the foetus.
These (cheap) services come as a relief to the many students in the
university. All you need to do is know someone in the faculty of
Medicine and your troubles are sorted. Furthermore, when dealing with a
student, one can be availed with flexible modes of payments, such as
cash or installments that are paid periodically over time.
The situation becomes more chilling given whispers that chamas are
founded specifically for abortion emergencies. These chamas provide a
financial cushion to their members. They loan out money to those who get
pregnant, who then pay back with little interest.
Private universities are renowned for their piety and disciplined
students; but when it comes to cases of unwanted pregnancies, they
aren’t left behind. Kemunto, a fresh graduate from a prestigious
university in Nairobi, explains how a few mistakes ago, after realising
that her runaway boyfriend had gotten her pregnant during her second
year, she immediately made up her mind to terminate the pregnancy. A
friend introduced her to a woman at a respected medical facility, who in
turn, forwarded her to a doctor who operates a ramshackle health centre
in the heart of Kiambu. She parted with a whooping Sh8,000, but the
trauma haunts her to date.
At another top university in Nairobi, students reported after a brief
break early this year to find a foetus decomposing in one of the female
loos. The gore, but sad, image of a baby whose life had been cut short
by its mother, suddenly found its way into the social media tabloids and
as expected, caused angry ripples throughout the campus. Most of the
people who were pissed off by the image being circulated online were the
women, and after three days or so, the individual who posted it online
was finally cajoled to pull it down.
Joy, a Third Year student at the institution says there is a dealer
who owns a chemist in town who has mastered the art of abortion. Just
like the rural varsity doctor, he summons girls who are tired and heavy
laden, and relieves them using the abortion pill, Misoprostol.
Misoprostol has become a darling for girls at the university. When
consulted, Dr Kizito Lubano, an obstetrician gynaecologist said
Misoprostol (otherwise known as Cytotec, Arthrotec or Oxaprost) was
originally meant for curing, among others, peptic ulcers. And when taken
in high doses, it induces labour by contracting the uterus and thus,
listed as one of its side effect to expectant women, who are warned not
to use it. However, he says university students now take advantage of
its side effect and use its overdose to abort. This is the same pill
used in the rural university mentioned earlier.
Abortion is not so good. Lets not practice it.
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