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.
Other services offered by WoW include
contraception, individual reproductive counseling, workshops, and education about unwanted pregnancy.
Workshops are conducted for lawyers, doctors, artists, writers,
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).
[Whitten, Diana. 2014. ''Vessel''. Documentary film. Published by Sovereignty Productions.] 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.
Once in international waters, the ship's medical personnel provide a range of reproductive health services that includes medical abortion.
The A-Portable was designed by the Dutch studio
Atelier van Lieshout
Joep van Lieshout (born 1963), is a Dutch artist and sculptor born in Ravenstein, Netherlands, and founder of Atelier Van Lieshout (AVL).
Life and work
Van Lieshout received his formal education and training from the Academy of Modern Art in ...
and functions as both medical clinic and art installation.
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.
The NGO is credited for reviving debates about abortion in the countries where Women on Waves visits.
Rebecca Gomperts
Rebecca Gomperts is a physician in general practice, artist and women's rights activist. Born in 1966, Gomperts grew up in the port town of
Vlissingen, the Netherlands. She moved to Amsterdam in the 1980s where she studied art and medicine simultaneously.
Drawing on her experiences as a resident physician on the Greenpeace vessel
''Rainbow Warrior II'', which was captained by Bart J. Terwiel, Gomperts created WoW in order to address the health issues created by
illegal abortion. While visiting Latin America on board the Rainbow Warrior II, the organization was inspired by a desire to further facilitate social change and women's health. In some developing countries, as many as 800 illegal, unsafe abortions are performed daily, in contrast to some developed nations, such as the Netherlands, where residents have access to safe, legal, medical abortions and contraception. In collaboration with
Atelier van Lieshout
Joep van Lieshout (born 1963), is a Dutch artist and sculptor born in Ravenstein, Netherlands, and founder of Atelier Van Lieshout (AVL).
Life and work
Van Lieshout received his formal education and training from the Academy of Modern Art in ...
, she designed a portable
gynaecology
Gynaecology or gynecology (see spelling differences) is the area of medicine that involves the treatment of women's diseases, especially those of the reproductive organs. It is often paired with the field of obstetrics, forming the combined are ...
unit called "A-portable" that can be installed on chartered ships. The stated goals of the organization are to raise awareness and stimulate discussion about laws restricting
abortion, as well as to provide safe, non-surgical abortions for women who live in countries where abortion is illegal.
The A-Portable
The mobile gynecological clinic was designed and named by Dutch artist and sculptor
Atelier van Lieshout
Joep van Lieshout (born 1963), is a Dutch artist and sculptor born in Ravenstein, Netherlands, and founder of Atelier Van Lieshout (AVL).
Life and work
Van Lieshout received his formal education and training from the Academy of Modern Art in ...
. Known as the A-Portable, the clinic is in a retrofitted shipping container. It is painted a light blue color with the Women on Waves logo painted on the sides.
To travel, the shipping container is strapped onto ships registered in the Netherlands, and rented by Women on Waves, which is a nongovernmental organization (NGO). Lambert-Beatty describes the logo, which was designed by Kees Ryter in 2001:
he clinic's
He or HE may refer to:
Language
* He (pronoun), an English pronoun
* He (kana), the romanization of the Japanese kana へ
* He (letter), the fifth letter of many Semitic alphabets
* He (Cyrillic), a letter of the Cyrillic script called ''He'' in ...
"side is emblazoned with a purple spot on which, in turn, floats an orange shape outlined in pink: a squared cross, one quickly realizes, of the kind that symbolizes humanitarian and medical aid."
p. 309
The clinic is a fully functional gynecological clinic offering contraceptive counseling, sonograms, and medical and surgery abortions. It is generally staffed with two physicians and a nurse. Trained volunteers also staff the ship to provide education and counseling. The ship's crew is nearly all female.
In ports in countries that allow it, the ship's staff provide workshops on legal and medical issues.
During visits to countries with restrictive laws, the ship travels into international waters, usually about 12 miles from land, in order to provide services.
The A-Portable functions as a medical clinic, but is also considered to be a work of art. The original funds to create the A-Portable were awarded by the Mondriaan Foundation, which is a Dutch "publicly financed fund for visual art and cultural heritage." It appeared in Portugal at the Ute Meta Bauer's Women Building Exhibition; in Amsterdam at the Mediamatic art space; and in ''Artforum.''
Lambert-Beatty notes that
Claire Bishop, an art historian, critic, and professor of art, interprets the A-Portable as "new political art."
Voyages
In 2002, after contentious debate in the
Dutch parliament, The Netherlands' Minister of Health,
Els Borst, gave permission to medical personnel on board the Women on Waves ship to offer pregnant women
RU-486, known colloquially as the abortion pill, on board their boat, ''Aurora''.
According to Borst, the decision was in line with the Dutch government's policy on the issue of sexual independence of women. The permission was given on the condition that the abortion pill would only be used to terminate pregnancies of up to nine weeks and would be provided in the presence of a
gynaecologist
Gynaecology or gynecology (see American and British English spelling differences, spelling differences) is the area of medicine that involves the treatment of women's diseases, especially those of the reproductive organs. It is often paired with ...
.
Ireland
Women on Waves made its maiden voyage aboard the ''Aurora'' to
Ireland in 2001. The ship carried two Dutch doctors and one Dutch nurse.
The stated purpose of Women on Waves Ireland was to "catalyze" the Irish movement to liberalize Ireland's abortion laws. At the time, Ireland had the most stringent prohibitions against abortion in Europe, with laws forbidding the procedure that dated to 1861.
Women on Waves Ireland provided education about abortion and unwanted pregnancy to individuals and to groups in workshops. On that journey, they were not allowed to do surgical or medical abortions, and were limited by Dutch law to provide only information on contraceptives, and not the contraceptives themselves.
The ship had been invited by Irish abortion rights organizations which coordinated a publicity campaign in advance of the ''Aurora's'' arrival. The ship anchored at Dublin Port, and traveled into international waters to provide educational services as Ireland's law prohibited discussion about abortion and contraceptives. During the ship's visit to Dublin Port, approximately 300 women participated. All of the ship's services were provided for free.
In 2016, Women on Waves collaborated with pro-abortion group to use drones and speed boats to deliver abortion pills to women in Northern Ireland.
Poland
WoW sailed the ''Langenort'' to
Poland in 2003.
Women on Waves was charged with violating Poland's laws against abortion by bringing RU-486, also known as the abortion drug, into Poland. While docked, protesters pelted fake blood and eggs at the ship. Four months afterward, the government of Poland dropped the charges, noting that there was no evidence that Women on Waves had violated Poland's laws. Poland's official polling company,
Centrum Badania Opinii Spolecznej Centrum Badania Opinii Społecznej (CBOS; English: Centre for Public Opinion Research) is an opinion polling institute in Poland, based in Warsaw. Originally established in communist Poland in 1982, , found that prior to WoW's visit, 44% of the population supported the liberalization of abortion laws, and that after the visit, the percentage rose to 56%.
In 2015, WoW flew a drone carrying abortion pills from
Frankfurt, Germany across the border to
Slubice, Poland. German police attempted to prevent the drones from leaving, but were unsuccessful. Polish police confiscated the drones and the personal iPads of the drones' pilots.
Portugal
In 2004, the ship ''Borndiep,'' carrying the A-Portable, was physically blocked by a naval warship as it attempted to enter
Portuguese waters.
In 2009, the European Court of Human Rights rendered a decision in favor of the plaintiffs in ''Women on Waves and Others v. Portugal''.
The court determined that although Portugal had a right to enforce its laws prohibiting abortion, the nation could have enforced the law in less harmful ways, e.g. by sequestering the abortion drugs that were on board the ship.
Spain
In 2008, Women on Waves' ship landed in
Valencia, Spain, where it had a mixed reception. Some demonstrators supported the group, others opposed it. According to
Catholic News Agency,
"On 18 October a group of 40 feminists gathered to counter the pro-life protests, which brought out four times as many people. They passed out boxes of matches with the picture of a burning church and the caption, 'The only church that brings light is the one that burns. Join us!'
On 19 October the feminists met again to distribute matches but decided to disband after they were overwhelmed by the large number of pro-life protesters who gathered at the port where the abortion ship was docked."
As the ship attempted to dock amid protesters on both sides of the issue, harbor patrol agents in a small boat lassoed a rope around the helm of the ship and attempted to pull it away from the dock.
Morocco
Ibtissam Lachgar
Ibtissam "Betty" Lachgar, also spelled Ibtissame ( ar, ابتسام لشكر) (born in August 1975) is a Moroccan developmental psychologist, feminist, human rights activist, and LGBT advocate. She's the co-founder of the MALI Movement (''Mouve ...
of MALI (''Mouvement alternatif pour les libertés individuelles'') invited Women on Waves to visit Morocco in 2012.
On 3 October 2012, the Moroccan health ministry closed the port of Smir to prevent the entry of the Women on Waves ship ''Langenort''. This was the first attempt by Women on Waves to make landfall in a Muslim-majority country. Anti-abortion protesters were present, many carrying signs against abortion. The activist Rebecca Gomperts was at the port to meet the ship, but she was escorted away upon encountering the protesters.
Guatemala
On 22 February 2017, the WoW ship docked in
Puerto Quetzal on the Pacific coast for a planned five-day visit. On 23 February, a scheduled press conference was shut down shortly after it started
and a blockade was imposed by
Army troops, preventing the activists from disembarking and visitors from boarding.
Catholic and other religious leaders and politicians spoke vociferously against the ship and its mission: " 'The boat of death has arrived in Guatemala', said lawmaker Raul Romero during a Congress session earlier on Wednesday."
The WoW ship was ejected into international waters by a Guatemalan military ship. The argument to expel the boat was that they lied to the immigration authorities by saying that they were tourists, but in reality they are a health organization that aims to provide abortions to women.
Mexico
In April 2017, the Adelaide ship docked in
Ixtapa, Mexico
Ixtapa (, ) is a resort city in Mexico, adjacent to the Pacific Ocean in the municipality of Zihuatanejo de Azueta in the state of Guerrero. It is located northwest of the municipal seat, Zihuatanejo, and northwest of Acapulco.
In the 200 ...
, where abortion procedures were illegal in much of the country. To administer the procedures, the crew ferried the women seeking abortions from Mexico’s Pacific coast to the international waters, where Mexican criminal law was not in effect for the ship.
Documentary
In 2014 ''
Vessel'', a documentary by Diana Whitten focusing on Women on Waves, premiered at the
SXSW Film Festival in
Austin, Texas, United States. It has won numerous awards.
Feminist activism
In an academic article published in ''Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society'', Carrie Lambert-Beatty claims that "the vessel
sone of the most audacious instances of feminist activism in recent memory."
See also
*
Women on Web
References
External links
Women on Waves websiteVessel Documentary film about Women on Waves
{{DEFAULTSORT:Women On Waves
Abortion-rights organisations in the Netherlands
Abortion providers
1999 establishments in the Netherlands
Organizations established in 1999
Non-profit organisations based in the Netherlands
BBC 100 Women