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				05-26-2005, 09:08 AM
			
			
			
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				Condoms-in-school debate hits Mexico
			 
 (gg)
 MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - A Mexican government ministry
 is pushing for the installation of condom machines in
 secondary schools in less affluent areas to stem a
 surge in teenage pregnancies, a scheme unlikely to
 find favor with the Roman Catholic church.
 
 A new study commissioned by the Social Development
 Ministry found that 15 percent of adolescent girls in
 deprived areas were pregnant, local media reported.
 Mexico does not produce national teenage pregnancy
 figures.
 
 "Statistics show that secondary school is when most
 people start having sex," ministry spokesman Andreas
 Solis said on Monday. "Promoting the use of condoms is
 an urgent necessity."
 
 The study found half of adolescents in areas with high
 poverty rates use no protection when they start having
 sex and that 20 percent had sexually transmitted
 infections.
 
 The study, which was confined to economically deprived
 areas, was carried out by the U.S. University of
 California, Berkeley, and Mexico's national health
 institute. It had not been made public but was leaked
 to the daily newspaper Reforma.
 
 The condom machine proposal would have to be approved
 by the Education Ministry and was expected to face
 firm opposition from parents' groups and church
 officials. Mexicans are overwhelmingly Roman Catholic.
 
 "It would implant sexual promiscuity because young
 people, believing they were protected, would be
 sexually irresponsible," Guillermo Bustamante, head of
 the national parents' group, told Reforma.
 
 Solis said the problem was urgent.
 
 "The problem starts at home because parents are
 reluctant to talk about the subject. As a mainly
 Catholic society, the theme of sin comes before the
 theme of health," Solis said.
 
 "Many teachers avoid the subject because sadly they
 don't have the ability or knowledge necessary to
 educate on this."
 
 The idea of distributing condoms in schools has
 triggered fierce debate in countries like the United
 States, Canada, Britain and Australia. In France, many
 state schools already have condom machines
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