Abbreviation | WoW |
---|---|
Formation | 1999 |
Type | Nonprofit organisation |
Purpose | Bringing reproductive health services such as abortion and education to countries where these are restricted |
Headquarters | Amsterdam, Netherlands |
Region served | Countries with restricted reproductive health services |
Founder | Rebecca Gomperts |
Website | womenonwaves.org |
Women on Waves (WoW) is a Dutch nongovernmental organization (NGO) created in 1999 by Dutch physician Rebecca Gomperts, in order to bring reproductive health services, particularly non-surgical abortion services and education, to women in countries with restrictive abortion laws.[1] Other services offered by WoW include contraception, individual reproductive counseling, workshops, and education about unwanted pregnancy.[2] Workshops are conducted for lawyers, doctors, artists, writers,[1] public health care activists, as well as for women and men to learn about contraceptive practices and non-surgical, self-induced abortion using RU-486 (medication abortion).[3][4] Services are provided on a commissioned ship that contains a specially constructed mobile clinic, the A-Portable. When WoW visits a country, women make appointments, and are taken on board the ship. The ship then sails out approximately 20 km (12 miles), to international waters, where Dutch laws are in effect on board ships registered in the Netherlands.[1] Once in international waters, the ship's medical personnel provide a range of reproductive health services that includes medical abortion.[5]
According to Gomperts, the first time the ship sailed out, it was a Dutch ship leaving Dutch waters. This meant they could take abortion pills with them to give out in international waters.[6]
The A-Portable was designed by the Dutch studio Atelier van Lieshout and functions as both medical clinic and art installation.[1]
Women on Waves volunteers and personnel have been targeted by governmental authorities, religious organizations, and local groups who are opposed to abortion and/or contraception.[1] The NGO is credited for reviving debates about abortion in the countries where Women on Waves visits.[1]
Today, access to abortion is a major focus of certain Dutch organizations and government initiatives.[7] In the Netherlands, abortion is legal up to the 24th week of pregnancy and covered by the Exceptional Medical Expenses Act or health insurers.[8]
Women on waves represents part of the global move for reproductive rights. The ship has been used to test and challenge the limited reproductive rights in countries like Ireland and attempt to create more access to abortion[9]
more than 9 out of 10 abortions worldwide occur in developing nations like the ones Gomperts and Women on Waves visit. Unsafe abortions in regions where it is outlawed or restricted are a leading cause of maternal death.
[10] Gomperts has faced considerable opposition to Women on Waves. The 2014 documentary Vessel shows anti-abortion protesters in Poland calling her a Nazi in a chant, and in Spain trying to tow the Women on Waves vessel back out to sea.[1]