<p>The Islamic seminary has ruled, "If a holy Muslim doctor advises that a woman is unable to bear birth pangs, then a less than three months old pregnancy can be terminated but if it is more than three months old, the abortion is absolutely unlawful".<br /><br />The Deoband has issued this fatwa in response to the question of a Muslim couple who sought its permission to abort their third child, after a doctor had advised them to wait for at least thirty months before the birth of another child.<br /><br />However, the medical fraternity does not endorse this fatwa.</p>.<p>"Terminating a more than three months old pregnancy can certainly be dangerous but why should one seek a hakeem's advice if the pregnancy is less than three months old?", asks Dr Fauzia Khanam, a gynaecologist, adding, that it is always better to refer to a professional doctor.<br /><br />Believing that only a professionally qualified doctor is best suited to deal with the complications of pregnancy, Dr Anjum Ansari, another gynaecologist, says, "a lot of people who prefer to approach a hakeem only harm themselves".<br /><br />In an earlier fatwa, the Deoband had said that it is lawful to use contraceptive methods only on the permission of a hakeem. </p>
<p>The Islamic seminary has ruled, "If a holy Muslim doctor advises that a woman is unable to bear birth pangs, then a less than three months old pregnancy can be terminated but if it is more than three months old, the abortion is absolutely unlawful".<br /><br />The Deoband has issued this fatwa in response to the question of a Muslim couple who sought its permission to abort their third child, after a doctor had advised them to wait for at least thirty months before the birth of another child.<br /><br />However, the medical fraternity does not endorse this fatwa.</p>.<p>"Terminating a more than three months old pregnancy can certainly be dangerous but why should one seek a hakeem's advice if the pregnancy is less than three months old?", asks Dr Fauzia Khanam, a gynaecologist, adding, that it is always better to refer to a professional doctor.<br /><br />Believing that only a professionally qualified doctor is best suited to deal with the complications of pregnancy, Dr Anjum Ansari, another gynaecologist, says, "a lot of people who prefer to approach a hakeem only harm themselves".<br /><br />In an earlier fatwa, the Deoband had said that it is lawful to use contraceptive methods only on the permission of a hakeem. </p>