In Ha’aretz Ethiopian Contraception Story, Another Problematic Headline
Last fall, a false Ha’aretz headline and story — later retracted — that a majority of Israelis support apartheid policies gave great cheer and sustenance to the anti-Israel crowd, and also made some inroads in mainstream western media outlets. (Of course, among the former, the subsequent correction was ignored.)
Now, Ha’aretz brings a new story which excites those who like to write about “Nazi Israel.” In a news story and Op-Ed a few weeks ago, and in another news article this week, Ha’aretz has reported that Israeli authorities forced Ethiopian women to receive shots of Depo Provera, a contraception that lasts three months, in order to immigrate to Israel.
The original headline of the December 2012 Op-Ed was:
The revelation that Israel is sterilizing Ethiopian women adds to a shameful history of abuse of powerless women and communities
Just like the case of the false apartheid poll headline, Ha’aretz editors were compelled to retract this one as well. The new subhead is:
Israel’s patronizing and inhumane treatment of Ethiopian women is nothing new
The following correction appears at the bottom of the page:
The Op-Ed, by Efrat Yardai, still ends with the notion that Israel was forcibly sterilizing Ethiopian women:
If they tried to sterilize me or take my children away, I think I would be talking nonsense too.
The original news story generated thousands of Facebook likes and hundreds of tweets. And the follow up article yesterday, a page-one article alleging that for Israeli officials “first time acknowledged the practice of injecting women of Ethiopian origin with the long-acting contraceptive Depo-Provera,” is gaining traction in the mainstream media, including the Los Angeles Times. The headline in Ha’aretz‘s print edition follows:
Ha’aretz reports:
A government official has for the first time acknowledged the practice of injecting women of Ethiopian origin with the long-acting contraceptive Depo-Provera.
Health Ministry Director General Prof. Ron Gamzu has instructed the four health maintenance organizations to stop the practice as a matter of course.
The ministry and other state agencies had previously denied knowledge or responsibility for the practice, which was first reported five years ago.
Gamzu’s letter instructs all gynecologists in the HMOs “not to renew prescriptions for Depo-Provera for women of Ethiopian origin if for any reason there is concern that they might not understand the ramifications of the treatment.”
The Los Angeles Times, in contrast, reports that Gamzu’s letter is not a confirmation of claims that Israel forcibly administered the shots to Ethiopian women:
The ministry official’s letter stressed the new guidelines did not constitute a position on the claims and relate to all women, not just those from Ethiopian
See also Elder of Ziyon’s excellent post on this topic, in which he cites a 2005 study showing that Ethiopian women favored the Depo Provera shots, which could be administered without the husbands’ knowlege:
Because contraceptives may introduce social discord, leading at times to intimate partners’ violence amongst African couples, women of low bargaining powers often resort to family planning methods that are suitable to covert use.
Women can take injections of Depo-Provera while visiting a health facility and remain protected against unwanted pregnancies for three months. This may be done without their husband’s knowledge and without the bother of having to remember to take the pill or to undergo clinical procedures that are involved when opting for implants or intrauterine devices. Consequently, a general pattern that has been observed in the contraceptive method mix in sub-Saharan Africa and elsewhere in the developing world is the predominance of injectables.
More from SNAPSHOTS
E.U.-Supported Palestinian University Calls to ‘Blow Up’ Jews
February 7, 2017
A Palestinian university with strong U.S. and E.U. ties held a militant parade graphically calling for the murder of Jews. Birzeit University, just outside of Ramallah in the West Bank (Judea and Samaria), held festivities [...]
German School Hails Opposition to Holocaust Remembrance Day
January 31, 2017
Benjamin Weinthal In Germany, Muslim students of Arab and Turkish origins refused to participate in International Holocaust Remembrance Day events—and the school applauded the students’ decision. Benjamin Weinthal, a Jerusalem Post correspondent and fellow at [...]
Yusef Daher At It Again, Lionizing “Terrorism’s Christian Godfather”
January 31, 2017
Yusef Daher, a Christian “peacemaker” in Jerusalem who enjoys the support of the World Council of Churches, is at it again. Daher, who serves as executive secretary of the WCC-supported Jerusalem Interchurch Center (JICC), recently [...]
You Can’t be Pro-Peace (Or Pro-Palestinian) If You Don’t Hold Palestinian Leaders Accountable
January 30, 2017
In early March, an organization called the Telos Group is going to hold its annual leadership conference in Washington, D.C. Billing itself as an activist organization that is pro-Palestinian, pro-peace and pro-Israel, the Telos Group [...]
Netanyahu
SupportsSilent on Trump Travel BanJanuary 30, 2017
“PM’s anti-Jewish support for Trump’s anti-Muslim decree” is a front-page headline of Haaretz’s English print edition yesterday. Similarly, Haaretz’s online headline states: “Netanyahu’s anti-Jewish Support for Trump’s anti-Muslim Decree.” But Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu [...]
Major Catholic Outlets in U.S. Pass Over Archbishop’s Death in Silence
January 27, 2017
Catholic news outlets such as the Catholic News Service remained silent about the death of Archbishop Hilarion Capucci, who spent two years in an Israeli jail for smuggling guns for the PLO in the mid-1970s. [...]
Updated: Peacemaker Supported by World Council of Churches Promotes Lie About Israel
January 24, 2017
Update: January 25, 2017 Yusef Daher has edited the Facebook post described below, deleting a link to an article from a fake news site that broadcast a lie about Israel’s President Reuvin Rivlin. Here is [...]





