The one-day medical outreach, organised in collaboration with International Centre for Migration on Policy Development (ICMPD), was under the framework of “Strengthening Niger-Nigeria Cooperation on Countering Trafficking in Human Beings.”
would impose strict new restrictions on how much the preston is prescribed and who can prescribe it and where patients can get it. and at what point in their pregnancy, women and girls are allowed to take the pill. let s get straight to cnn s jessica schneider and jessica. this deadline has been moved to friday. the justices are still considering the very same questions in this case. what options does the court have here? jake? this really just gives the supreme court more time for a definitive decision, something that they ve sort of been delaying over the past few days. at the same time, though, this really adds to the uncertainty that we ve been hearing about. women doctors and even the drugmaker s here. so in part, the supreme court didn t give the justice department a little bit of what they were asking for here and filings last night, the solicitor general basically said, look, if you can t come up with a definitive decision, at least extend this stay for a few more days, and tha
i m so grateful to you for covering these stories. it s easy to forget these girls and move on and afghanistan is such a mess. we can t abandon them. we have to hold on to the hope that they will have a better future, and we have to do everything we can to continue to apply pressure and most important to bring attention to it. do you think there is real hope in the near future for these girls to be able to go back to school? i think there s look, we re carving out ways to do our work. i think there is some limited hope, but in terms of this de facto authority government really changing, i can t say i m super optimistic about that. i think the key for us is we have to keep doing what we re doing. we have to find ways to provide health care, provide education, and, you know, really what i saw when i was there last year was 28 million people are in desperate need of humanitarian assistance. i saw babies on the verge of starvation. the needs there are so tremendous, and i think this
in some of our education work. but that s nowhere near enough. so we need those exemptions to be expanded and upheld and reliable. we re right out of time, but i did want to squeeze this in. the taliban has banned women from pretty much all education at the moment in the country where women have to see women doctors, as one example. what s going to be the long-term implication of women not being educated to do those crucial jobs? exactly. that only the taliban says only women can do? again, that s the message we gave. if you want female teachers, doctors, midwives to deliver babies? you have to have girls go to school. so we raise that point too. again, we were told, we re working on it. we said, you ve told us this before, we haven t seen action. words are not enough, we do have to see those actions. otherwise, we can t go back to work. yeah, i wish you well. and you do amazing work. thank you so much.
women everywhere, whether they re economic station, whatever state they live in, should be able to control what happens with their own bodies. josh s opponent, josh s opponent says that he thinks both women who get an abortion and the doctors who help them and treat them should be prosecuted. john s opponent said the decision about whether to have an abortion should be made by, quote, women doctors and local political leaders. really? i mean they, are you going to petition the man there are you calling the sheriff? city council members, s who exactly should tell you when to start a family? then you should make that decision. and if that s not worth 15 minutes of your time, the