UAE | Health
UAE authorities study legalising therapeutic abortion
The UAE may overturn its ban on terminating foetuses with severe genetic disorders, such as thalassaemia.
Dubai: The UAE may overturn its ban on terminating foetuses with severe genetic disorders, such as thalassaemia.
Abortion in the UAE is presently strictly prohibited unless it is to save the life of the mother, in accordance with Islamic law. Some schools of thought, however, argue that abortion of a diseased foetus is also allowed as long as it is younger than 120 days.
About one in 12 Emiratis carry the gene for thalassaemia, characterised by the breakdown of oxygen-rich red blood cells, and other haemoglobinopathies.
Dr Ali Shakar, undersecretary at the Ministry of Health, told Gulf News that the ministry was currently working with legal and religious authorities to draft a law allowing therapeutic abortions, as part of the nation's prevention programme of genetic disorders.
"We are studying it from two ways: on the mother or child's health. But the choice to have the abortion will be under the umbrella of religion. Whatever we decide has to be within the religious and social environment," he said.
He said other than thalassaemia and sickle cell anaemia, genetic disorders that may be eligible for abortion include Trisomy 21 or Down's Syndrome, caused by triplication of the 21st chromosome.
However, he stressed that they have not decided on what diseases to include or leave out, saying that the study was still at the early stages.
"The rule [will not be] not easy to pass, especially if it is coming out as a law," he added.
Share this article
Popular in UAE

-
Your pictures
Readers' pictures
The best reader pictures from around the UAE this week
Latest news
- Dubai Airshow: Change in Emirates check-in time
- Dance group brings taste of Korean culture to Abu Dhabi
- EAD studies focus on water security
- Dubai Press Club marks 10th anniversary
- Visitors flock to see latest offerings at Sharjah book fair
- UAE combats human trafficking
- Ministry denies hijacking of UAE-flagged ship
- Saif meets special needs centre users
- Man says he repaid 95% of amount he embezzled
- Dubai saleswoman claims she was duped, raped
- Female clerk, waiter deny drug trafficking charges
- Live hoardings: Ad a glance
- Gem of a woman
- Dewa charges: It's a bitter bill
- Weighty matter: Zap those fat cells
Community Reports
-
Help me find my precious cat
Raif, my cute eight-month-old ‘fur ball', went missing in Abu Dhabi's Al Bateen area last month
-
Pavement parking irks pedestrians
Gulf News reader calls on authorities to step in and stop car owners from invading pathways meant for safe walking
-
Faded parking lines pose a problem
Motorists could be fined for parking incorrectly even though they can hardly see the boundaries in the designated areas
-
School buses block residential parking
Commercial vehicles taking up free parking facilities in Al Wuheida, inconveniencing residents in surrounding villas


