Myanmar questioning sex education in textbook

Unchaperoned teens, gay partners and sex workers – fictional characters in a new curriculum for Myanmar schools are causing a real-world tussle over morality in a deeply conservative nation.

In Myanmar, sex out of wedlock is illegal, teenage dating is frowned upon by censorious elders and same-sex relations are still officially illegal.

Yet sex education is urgently needed, said advocates.

Nearly 8,000 died in 2018 from AIDS-related diseases, the country has the second-highest maternal death rate in Asia after Afghanistan and women’s rights group IPAS estimates around a quarter of a million unsafe abortions are undertaken every year.

Teenagers have only been taught sex education since 2016, when the new government of Aung San Suu Kyi vowed to overhaul the country’s outdated curriculum.

But embarrassed teachers often side-line a subject tackling everything from periods and contraception to sexually-transmitted diseases.

A new textbook for the coming academic year — slated to start in July — included scenarios such as teenagers feeling intimate over homework, a gay couple whose condom breaks, and a customer at a karaoke bar offering a waitress money for sex.

Conservatives in the Buddhist-majority country were outraged.

‘Is this a school textbook or a porno?’ challenged Facebook user Aung Pho Min next to photos of the case studies aimed at 16 and 17-year-olds, triggering an online debate that snowballed.

Monk Ashin Agga Dhama, once a member of the now banned hard-line Buddhist group MaBaTha, waded in, branding the book ‘filth’ that flew against the country’s values.

The ensuing online tit-for-tat saw a young doctor, who accused the clergy of hypocrisy, attacked by a mob and later jailed for 21 months for insulting Buddhism.

After ‘hearing the public’s voice’, the government announced it would review the curriculum so, for now, all sex ed is shelved.

Tensions between conservatives and those open to new ideas have increased since the country started transitioning to democracy in 2010, said Rosalie Metro from the University of Missouri-Columbia.

The curriculum has always been a place where ‘ideological struggle’ plays out, added Metro, who has studied education in Myanmar for 20 years.

Many online comments questioned whether the controversy had a political motive.

The Facebook account of Aung Phyo Min, the man who sparked the row, describes him as a member of the military-backed USDP opposition party.

Elections, confirmed for November, will likely return Suu Kyi’s ruling administration to power.

But the USDP, after five years in the wilderness, aims to take a chunk from her majority and was quick to jump on the sex ed debate.

The party condemned the classes as encouragement for premarital sex, child rape, and the ‘arousal of sexual desire’ among children.

The Ministry of Education denied this, telling reporters the curriculum had children’s rights and interests at its core and had been carefully designed with expert advice.

All the teenagers AFP spoke to gave a resounding thumbs up to sex education classes, admitting they largely relied on Facebook and friends for information.

Women usually have the most to lose.

If single, an unplanned pregnancy can be devastating. They are often shunned by their family, school and community, with little chance of support from the father.

‘Anyone who objects to these classes doesn't live in reality,’ says NLD MP and campaigner Phyu Phyu Thin.

News Courtesy: www.newagebd.net