EMGA เป็นที่ปรึกษาให้ Annapurna Finance ในการระดมเงินทุนจากหนี้สินมูลค่า 15 ล้านยูโรจาก OeEB

ลอนดอน, March 11, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Annapurna Finance ระดมทุนในรูปแบบตราสารหนี้ไม่ด้อยสิทธิ์มูลค่า 15 ล้านยูโร จาก OeEB หรือธนาคารเพื่อการพัฒนาแห่งออสเตรีย ซึ่งเงินทุนดังกล่าวจะนำไปใช้เพื่อให้ความช่วยเหลือทางการเงินแก่ลูกค้ากลุ่มไมโครไฟแนนซ์ของบริษัท โดย EMGA เป็นที่ปรึกษาในธุรกรรมดังกล่าว

เงินทุนที่ระดมในรูปแบบหนี้สินมูลค่า 15 ล้านยูโรนี้ เกิดขึ้นในช่วงที่สถาบันทางการเงินทั่วโลกต่างพยายามสำรวจช่องทางการให้บริการระดมทุนระหว่างประเทศ เพื่อขยายการให้บริการตามวัตถุประสงค์ที่ตั้งไว้

“การเพิ่มอัตราการเข้าถึงทางการเงินเป็นหนึ่งในเป้าหมายเชิงกลยุทธ์ของเรา เราจึงยินดีที่ได้ร่วมงานกับ Annapurna ซึ่งเป็นพันธมิตรผู้มีประสบการณ์ด้านไมโครไฟแนนซ์”  Sabine Gaber กรรมการบริหารของ OeEB กล่าว “ทั้งนี้ ผู้หญิงมักเข้าถึงบริการทางการเงินได้ค่อนข้างจำกัดมาก เราจึงยินดีอย่างยิ่งที่เงินทุนของเราจะมีโอกาสนำไปใช้สนับสนุนผู้ประกอบการหญิง และเป็นส่วนหนึ่งในการช่วยเพิ่มความเท่าเทียมทางเพศในประเทศอินเดีย”

ประธานเจ้าหน้าที่การเงินของ Annapurna Satyajit Das ให้ความเห็นโดยกล่าวว่า “Annapurna ยินดีเป็นอย่างยิ่งและขอต้อนรับ OeEB ในฐานะพันธมิตรด้านเงินทุนของเรา” เขากล่าวเพิ่มเติมว่า “เรายังคงเติบโตต่อเนื่องแม้ว่าจะมีภาวะโรคระบาด และเงินทุนที่ได้รับจาก OeEB จะช่วยกระตุ้นกิจกรรมการดำเนินงานของเราและสร้างผลกระทบเชิงบวกได้อย่างแข็งแกร่ง” นอกจากนั้นยังชื่นชมคณะที่ปรึกษาจาก EMGA ที่ช่วยปิดดีลดังกล่าว

กรรมการผู้จัดการและหัวหน้าผู้บริหารด้านวาณิชธนกิจของ EMGA Sajeev Chakkalakal กล่าวว่า “ผมรู้สึกยินดีที่สามารถถ่ายทอดวิสัยทัศน์ความเป็นผู้ส่งเสริมการขับเคลื่อนเศรษฐกิจในอินเดียของ Annapurna และได้วางโครงสร้าง รวมทั้งช่วยเจรจาโซลูชันการระดมทุนนี้กับ OeEB”  Jeremy Dobson  กรรมการผู้จัดการ กล่าวเสริมว่า “การบริหารงานที่แข็งแกร่งและพื้นฐานทางการเงินที่มั่นคงของ Annapurna ร่วมกับกรอบการทำงานเชิงสถาบันและศักยภาพทางการเงินของ OeEB เป็นปัจจัยสำคัญที่ทำให้ Sajeev และทีมวาณิชธนกิจของ EMGA สามารถบรรลุการดำเนินการจัดหาเงินทุนครั้งนี้”

Annapurna Finance เป็น NBFC-MFI ที่อยู่ใน 10 อันดับแรกของอินเดีย Annapurna Finance ก่อตั้งขึ้นด้วยวัตถุประสงค์เพื่อให้บริการลูกค้าด้วยการนำลูกค้าเข้าสู่ระบบธุรกิจกระแสหลัก ผ่านการให้บริการทางการเงินที่ให้บริการถึงที่ ปัจจุบันดำเนินงานอยู่ใน 19 รัฐ โดยบริหารสินทรัพย์มูลค่ากว่า 640 ล้านยูโร ในกลุ่มไมโครไฟแนนซ์และ MSME มีสำนักงานใหญ่ตั้งอยู่ที่ เมืองภุพเนศวร รัฐโอฑิศา

Oesterreichische Entwicklungsbank AG (OeEB) เป็นธนาคารเพื่อการพัฒนาแห่งออสเตรีย ซึ่งเริ่มดำเนินงานตั้งแต่เดือนมีนาคม ปี 2008 โดยเชี่ยวชาญด้านการให้บริการเงินทุนระยะยาวสำหรับดำเนินโครงการต่าง ๆ ในภาคเอกชนของประเทศกำลังพัฒนาซึ่งเป็นไปเพื่อการพัฒนาอย่างยั่งยืน นอกจากนี้ OeEB ยังให้ความช่วยเหลือทางเทคนิค ซึ่งสามารถใช้เสริมสร้างการพัฒนาโครงการต่าง ๆ อีกด้วย สำหรับข้อมูลเพิ่มเติม โปรดไปที่ https://www.oe-eb.at/

Emerging Markets Global Advisory (EMGA) ซึ่งมีสำนักงานในลอนดอน และนิวยอร์ก ให้บริการช่วยสถาบันทางการเงินและบริษัทต่าง ๆ ที่ต้องการระดมทุนในรูปแบบตราสารหนี้หรือตราสารทุน ทีมงานนานาชาติของ EMGA มีประสบการณ์หลายทศวรรษในการทำธุรกรรมในนามของลูกค้าในตลาดเกิดใหม่และระบบเศรษฐกิจบุกเบิก ซึ่งรวมทั้งอินเดียซึ่งเป็นตลาดหลักของบริษัท ด้วยผลงานอันเป็นที่ประจักษ์ด้านการจัดหาเงินทุนและการให้คำปรึกษาเชิงกลยุทธ์ในวัฏจักรเศรษฐกิจที่หลากหลาย EMGA ยังคงขยายการดำเนินงานอย่างต่อเนื่องทั้งในเชิงภูมิศาสตร์และบริการ เพื่อตอกย้ำตำแหน่งที่แข็งแกร่งและโดดเด่นในฐานะธนาคารเพื่อการลงทุนเฉพาะทางที่เน้นตลาดเกิดใหม่โดยเฉพาะ

info@emergingmarketsglobaladvisory.com

Polygon Partners with Token||Traxx To Produce Multichain Music NFT Marketplace

NFT music platform creating an intertwined distributed ecosystem • Polygon to provide additional software support and potential funding to emerging musicians on the Token||Traxx platform • Token||Traxx to have cross-chain bridge with existing partner, Zilliqa

London, UK, March 10, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — (via Blockchain WirePolygon, an Ethereum scaling platform onboarding millions to Web3, today announces a partnership with NFT music platform Token||Traxx™ ahead of its Token Generation Event (TGE) this month. The collaboration will allow Token||Traxx to leverage Polygon’s low-cost and interoperable infrastructure to build out its music NFT marketplace.

Polygon Studios — the NFT and gaming arm of leading Ethereum scaling protocol Polygon — will also be offering grant funding to Token||Traxx’s new, independent music creator economy which is set to make a seismic paradigm shift within the music marketplace. The Polygon foundation will support the development of the Token||Traxx software and their emerging artists as they continue to grow their Web3 creator economy.

Token||Traxx is a new marketplace that redefines and enhances the value of music, by supporting and financially benefiting the entire music community using Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs) technology.

Token||Traxx will be multi-chain, using Polygon along with other networks including its strategic founder partner Zilliqa which it will bridge to later this year.

“NFTs have the opportunity to positively disrupt the music industry, providing creators with a greater share of the distribution rights while conveying verifiable ownership to fans. By leveraging Polygon to accomplish this goal, Token||Traxx unlocks the full potential of the Web3 creator economy and sidesteps the prohibitive transaction fees and latency associated with Ethereum,” said Ishan Negi, Chief of Staff, Polygon Studios.

“Token||Traxx is delighted to join forces with Polygon,” said Tim Gentry, Chief Operating Officer and co-founder of Token||Traxx and formerly global revenue director at the Guardian. “Polygon’s sustainable and ultra low-cost blockchain and interoperable ecosystem presents the perfect launchpad for the project. With cross-chain technology and cross-chain bridges in place Token||Traxx will run with increased elasticity, providing users with freedom of choice.

“Through Polygon’s novel Ethereum scaling solution, we will be getting excellent user experience with high-speed transactions, near-zero gas fees and superb community governance. Cross-chain capabilities will also maximise secondary NFT markets for us,” summarised Gentry.

NOTICE

Token Traxx Music Limited is not a regulated entity. Ownership of the tokens carries considerable risk and should not be contemplated by anyone who does not have specific knowledge of the use, purpose and transmission of tokens. This Press notification is not an offer to sell or promote the sale of tokens. Token||Traxx tokens will be unregulated and will not be sold as an investment. The sale of tokens when it occurs will be subject to satisfactory compliance with all laws and regulations relating thereto and to purchasers entering binding contractual terms. The use of the Token||Traxx platform and participation in the marketplace and use of the Token||Traxx token to engage with the functionality provided by the platform and marketplace will be subject to separate terms and conditions.The Token Traxx token (TRAXX) is available for purchase by SORS DIGITAL ASSETS LIMITED (SORS) which is registered as a VASP in accordance with the rules of the Central Bank of Ireland.

Token||Traxx™ is the Trading Name of Token Traxx Music Limited registered in England under Number 13753129

For further Press information:

Token||Traxx: Anthony Burr, ab@tokentraxx.com Tel: +44 7766 459 469

Polygon: Cryptoland PR Polygon@cryptolandpr.com

About TokenIITraxx
TokenIITraxx has a mission is to be at the centre of a new independent music creator economy, providing a platform driven by NFTs, that redefines and enhances the value of music, which supports and financially benefits the whole community.

TokenIITraxx celebrates and rewards the unique symbiosis of ‘The 3C’s – Music’s Creators, Curators and Collectors’ and their specialist contribution to the discovery and adoption of global music engagement.

TokenIITraxx offers financial independence and creative freedom. For more information, visit www.tokentraxx.com
Twitter (join the conversation) | Telegram (group chat) | Discord (collaboration)

About Polygon
Polygon is the leading platform for Ethereum scaling and infrastructure development. Its growing suite of products offers developers easy access to all major scaling and infrastructure solutions: L2 solutions (ZK Rollups and Optimistic Rollups), sidechains, hybrid solutions, stand-alone and enterprise chains, data availability solutions, and more. Polygon’s scaling solutions have seen widespread adoption with 7000+ applications hosted, 1B+ total transactions processed, ~100M+ unique user addresses, and $5B+ in assets secured.

If you’re an Ethereum Developer, you’re already a Polygon developer! Leverage Polygon’s fast and secure txns for your dApp, get started here.

Website Twitter Ecosystem Twitter | Developer Twitter | Studios Twitter | Telegram LinkedIn Reddit Discord | Instagram | Facebook

About Polygon Studios
Polygon Studios is the Gaming and NFT arm of Polygon focused on growing the global Blockchain Gaming and NFT Industry and bridging the gap between Web 2 and Web 3 gaming through investment, marketing and developer support. The Polygon Studios ecosystem comprises highly loved games and NFT projects like OpenSea, Upshot, Aavegotchi, Zed Run, Skyweaver by Horizon Games, Decentraland, Megacryptopolis, Neon District, Cometh, and Decentral Games. If you’re a game developer, builder or NFT creator looking to join the Polygon Studios ecosystem, get started here.
Twitter Facebook | Instagram Telegram Tiktok | LinkedIn

Sophi.io is INMA 2022 Global Media Awards Finalist for Print Automation

TORONTO, March 10, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Sophi.io, The Globe and Mail’s AI-powered automation and optimization platform, was announced this week as a finalist in the International News Media Association (INMA)’s 2022 Global Media Awards in the category of Best Innovation in Newsroom Transformation. Partnering with Naviga, it automated print laydown for Agderposten, a regional daily newspaper that serves over 25,000 readers across Norway, and increased print efficiencies by 66%.

“Sophi’s automated machine-learning system is the biggest transformation to print media in decades,” said Gordon Edall, Co-Founder at Sophi.io. “We’re grateful that Agderposten chose to work with Naviga and us. Their commitment to improving efficiency and embracing ground-breaking technology like Naviga Publisher powered by Sophi.io should inspire the entire media industry to look forward to a future where AI and automation helps everyone.”

Naviga Publisher powered by Sophi.io is an artificial intelligence-powered system that emulates human decisions to produce newspaper pages that look like they were created with an understanding of the news of the day as well as high journalistic standards. All editors need to do is roughly prioritize articles and hit the “Print My Newspaper” button to generate an automated print laydown, without templates, in minutes. Handing over this labour-intensive task lets newsrooms focus on their real objective of finding and telling the next important story.

“It’s hours saved for journalism,” said Agderposten’s Editor-in-Chief Katrine Lia. And the staff at Agderposten often cannot tell the difference between pages produced by Sophi and those handled by their editors.

Sophi and Naviga, a large software technology provider for the global publishing industry, have been working with Agderposten for more than a year now and successes there have paved the way to bringing dozens of new titles from several major publishing houses on board this year. Sophi provides cutting edge AI and ML technology that, along with Naviga Publisher, fully automates the end-to-end print production workflow.

Agderposten was the first customer to use Publisher. Its print production process is now centralized, its newspaper laydown is up to 80% automated, and most impressively, Agderposten has realized a 66% reduction in time and resources – lowering the cost of producing the printed newspaper and letting journalists work on creating digital content rather than operating InDesign.

Agderposten CEO Øyvind Klausen said he expected cost savings and efficiency would continue to increase as more of Agderposten’s pages were automated and more of its newspapers implemented the print automation solution.

The Global Media Awards received 854 entries from 252 news brands in 46 countries this year. The judges consist of 50 media experts from 24 countries focused across 20 categories, including news brands, media platforms, subscriptions, advertising, data and insights, product, and newsrooms. The first place winners will be announced on June 9.

About Naviga
Naviga (https://www.navigaglobal.com) is the leading provider of software and services powering media-rich industries. Their Content Engagement Platform helps companies create, enrich, deliver and monetize content to manage engagements from end-to-end. Their solutions are easy to use, scalable and agile. Combining their experience in media with a dedication to digital, they’ve developed software solutions that help any content-driven business meet the demands of the future of information. With headquarters in Bloomington, MN and regional offices throughout the world, Naviga is a trusted partner serving over 1,400 news media, entertainment media, broadcast, magazine, financial services and corporate clients in 45 countries.

About Sophi.io 
Sophi.io (https://www.sophi.io) was developed by The Globe and Mail to help content publishers make important strategic and tactical decisions. It is a suite of AI and ML-powered automation, optimization and prediction solutions that include Sophi Site Automation, Sophi for Paywalls and Sophi for First Party Data. Sophi also powers Naviga Publisher for one-click automated laydown of print and ePaper publishing. Sophi is designed to improve the metrics that matter most to your business, such as subscriber retention and acquisition, engagement, recency, frequency and volume.

Media Contact  
Jamie Rubenovitch 
Head of Marketing, Sophi 
The Globe and Mail         
416-585-3355  
jrubenovitch@globeandmail.com 

Thousands of Refugees in Indonesia ‘Shut Out’ from Public Facilities

Thousands of refugees in Indonesia are finding themselves shut out of public services including travel and shopping because of a bureaucratic glitch that prevents them from proving they have been vaccinated against COVID-19.

Indonesia is a transit country for 13,175 refugees, more than half of whom are from Afghanistan. Unlike some countries where refugees are kept In camps, refugees in Indonesia can roam freely and use public facilities. Most live around the Jakarta greater metropolitan area.

In 2020, the country launched “Peduli Lindungi,” a digital COVID-19 contact-tracing app giving vaccinated residents access to public facilities and mass transit. The program, however, requires people to upload their 16-digit government-issued civil registry number before they are vaccinated. Only citizens, permanent residents and foreigners with work visas have the number; refugees – more than 56% of whom have been vaccinated — do not.

The U.N. Refugee Agency, UNHCR, with the support of Indonesian state-owned pharmaceutical company Bio Farma, developed a system to generate a different registration number to allow refugees to register in the app. However, the Jakarta Health Agency, which oversees the public plan, does not have the authority to generate the new numbers. The issue is now under discussion among the Health and Foreign ministries and the UNHCR.

Therefore, the refugees who received their vaccinations at local health clinics under the public vaccination plan did not receive an electronic vaccine certificate that would otherwise be uploaded to the Peduli Lindungi app. They also have no proof of vaccination other than a handwritten slip.

Somali refugee Ahmed Sheikh described the problem he faced when stopped by security guards asking for proof of vaccination at public transportation facilities or shopping malls.

“When we show them a handwritten slip issued by health workers at the public health clinic, they don’t believe it. …. It’s hard to explain to them when they don’t speak English too,” he told VOA.

Dr. Ngabila Salama, the head of the Jakarta Health Agency acknowledged the administrative hurdle, telling VOA the agency is limited by legal uncertainty; it does not have the legal authority to generate a useable civil registration number.

“We need to be accountable for every vaccine that we give out. It’s a shame if we cannot register all the vaccine recipients onto the Peduli Lindungi app. Imagine if we give out over 5,000 vaccines to refugees that are not registered on the Peduli Lindungi app. How can we be accountable for every vaccine, when we must undergo an audit by the Financial Audit Board? They may think we wasted a lot of the vaccines.” she said.

Some refugees are considering postponing getting their first vaccinations or second doses until this administrative problem is solved.

Although Sheikh is already vaccinated, he doubts he will let his wife be vaccinated soon, considering the circumstances.

“I don’t think I’m going to bring my wife to a Puskesmas [local health clinic] to get vaccinated because even if they give her the vaccine, they won’t enable the Peduli Lindungi app for her and can’t give her the electronic vaccine certificate she needs. I don’t want her to get the vaccine if we can’t get an [electronic] vaccine certificate. That’s what all refugees want.”

The UNHCR and nongovernmental organizations are trying to draw attention to the issue.

Zico Pestalozzi, campaign and advocacy coordinator at Suaka, an NGO that handles refugee issues, said “the Refugee Task Force under the Ministry of Political, Security and Legal Affairs should better coordinate [with relevant stakeholders] and ensure inclusive access to the Peduli Lindungi App.

“The UNHCR and NGOs are nongovernmental bodies, so it is up to the government to take charge of this issue and not simply divert responsibility back to the UNHCR,” he said.

Dicky Budiman, an Indonesian epidemiologist at Griffith University in Australia warns that “If we don’t protect this vulnerable population fast enough. We will be keeping a possible ‘pocket of infection.’ It will become a big problem because then it could produce a new variant or at least a new cluster among the refugee community.”

Pestalozzi agreed with Budiman, saying that if this problem lingers, it could turn into a public health risk and set back all the positive initiatives from the Indonesian government to improve refugees’ lives, including providing free vaccines, establishing learning centers and access to vocational learning.

Source: Voice of America

Capacity needs assessment launched

In the Lao PDR, more than a third of women experience violence in their lifetime but less than two percent of women report it to authorities.

The Second Five-Year National Action Plan Prevention and Elimination of Violence Against Women (NAPEVAW) set a target to increase reporting of violence to 20 per cent by 2025, and the justice sector plays a crucial role to making sure this can be achieved.

On Mar 10, in Vientiane, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) with the Lao Women’s Union (LWU), the National Commission for the Advancement of Women, Mothers, and Children (NCAWMC), and the Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA) officially launched the report of the capacity needs assessment of the justice sector to prevent and respond to violence against women.

The capacity needs assessment determined the current situation of the justice sector (Ministry of Justice, Ministry of Public Security, Office of the Supreme People’s Prosecutor, and the People’s Supreme Court) to deliver on their responsibilities under the NAPEVAW including the provision of legal aid and mediation by trained legal practitioners, law enforcement and prevention through the police, and the prosecution perpetrators of violence against women together with the adjudication of cases.

“This assessment was an important first step to understand the situation of the justice sector and what needs to be done to make sure the targets set out in the NAPEVAW are achieved,” said Vice President of LWU and Vice Chairperson of NCAWMC Ms. Chansoda Phonethip, “and this report provides a clear roadmap for achieving this goal”.

The NAPEVAW requires partnerships across sectors to work together to eliminate all forms of discrimination against women, promote gender equality and end violence against women once and for all, and the results of the assessment highlighted the need to deepen partnerships both within and outside the justice sector. The launch brought together officials from the justice sector, LWU, and NCAWMC, representatives from civil society, international organizations, and donor agencies, to establish a common understanding about the current circumstances and next steps.

“While the capacity needs assessment revealed that the justice sector is underprepared to deliver on the NAPEVAW, this is also a rare opportunity to begin laying the groundwork, together, to build a sturdy and robust system,” said Ms. Catherine Phuong, Deputy Resident Representative of UNDP Lao PDR. “In order to do so, we count on partnerships with the whole community to ensure that our collective action to eliminate violence against women can be done together under one khan hom, or umbrella”.

Deputy Country Director of the Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA) Mr. Sangjun Kim, reaffirmed KOICA’s commitment to eliminating violence against women in the Lao PDR, “Through the Khan Hom Project, KOICA is committed to continue supporting all sectors providing essential services in the Lao PDR to ensure that women receive quality services.

The justice sector is especially important to ensuring that key human rights safeguards are in place and the rule of law is upheld.”

The capacity needs assessment helped to identify key areas for investment in the justice sector to ensure implementation of the NAPEVAW, including gender training for police, lawyers, and judges, gender-responsive budgeting, and the adoption of digital tools for the collection and sharing of information across agencies.

The Khan Hom Project, supported by KOICA, is implemented in partnership by the LWU, NCAWMC, UNFPA, and UNDP, to reduce discrimination and eliminate violence against women.

Source: Lao News Agency

Texas Clinics’ Lawsuit Over Abortion Ban ‘Effectively Over’

The Texas Supreme Court on Friday dealt essentially a final blow to abortion clinics’ best hopes of stopping a restrictive law that has sharply curtailed the number of abortions in the state since September and will now fully stay in place for the foreseeable future.

The ruling by the all-Republican court was not unexpected, but it slammed the door on what little path forward the U.S. Supreme Court had allowed Texas clinics after having twice declined to stop a ban on abortions after roughly six weeks of pregnancy.

It spells the coming end to a federal lawsuit that abortion clinics filed even before the restrictions took effect in September — and were then rejected at nearly every turn, and in nearly every court, for six months.

“There is nothing left, this case is effectively over with respect to our challenge to the abortion ban,” said Marc Hearron, attorney for the Center for Reproductive Rights, which led the challenge against the Texas law known as Senate Bill 8.

Although Texas abortion clinics are not dropping the lawsuit, they now expect it will be dismissed in the coming weeks or months.

It is likely to further embolden other Republican-controlled states that are now pressing forward with similar laws, including neighboring Oklahoma, where many Texas women have crossed state lines to get an abortion for the past six months. The Republican-controlled Oklahoma Senate on Thursday approved a half-dozen anti-abortion measures, including a Texas-style ban.

Texas’ law leaves enforcement up to private citizens, who are entitled to collect what critics call a bounty of $10,000 if they bring a successful lawsuit against a provider or anyone who helps a patient obtain an abortion.

The Texas law bans abortion after roughly six weeks of pregnancy and makes no exceptions in cases of rape or incest. Abortions in Texas have plummeted by about 50% since the law took effect, while the number of Texans going to clinics out of state and requesting abortion pills online has gone up.

In December, the U.S. Supreme Court decided to keep the law in place and allowed only a narrow challenge against the restrictions to proceed. The decision by the Texas Supreme Court turned on whether medical licensing officials had an enforcement role under the law, and therefore, could be sued by clinics that are reaching for any possible way to halt the restrictions.

But writing for the court, Justice Jeffrey Boyd said those state officials have no enforcement authority, “either directly or indirectly.”

Even though the Texas law is more restrictive than any in the country, the future of abortion rights in the U.S. is likely to come down to a Supreme Court decision later this year over a separate case out of Mississippi. That one amounts to a direct challenge of Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 case that affirmed the constitutional right to an abortion.

In December, the court’s conservative majority signaled a willingness to roll back abortion rights across the country, which clinics fear could allow Texas and other GOP-controlled states to ban abortion outright.

The number of abortions in September and October in Texas fell by about 50% compared to the same months a year earlier, from 4,511 in September 2020 to 2,197 in September 2021, and from 4,650 in October 2020 to 2,251 in October 2021, according to state health figures.

But that data only tells part of the story. Researchers say the number of Texas women going to clinics in neighboring states and going online to get abortion pills by mail has risen sharply since the law took effect.

A study released this month showed that from September to December, nearly 1,400 Texans a month were going to neighboring states for abortions. The study from the University of Texas at Austin’s Texas Policy Evaluation Project collected data from 34 of 44 open clinics in Arkansas, Colorado, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, New Mexico and Oklahoma.

It found that about 5,600 Texans went to the clinics in nearby states over those months compared with just more than 500 for the same period in 2019.

Another study led by a University of Texas researcher found an increase in the number of Texans requesting abortion pills from the overseas nonprofit Aid Access. The study, published in the medical journal JAMA Network Open, found that during the first week of September, requests per day jumped to about 138 compared to a previous average of 11. Over the subsequent weeks in September, requests averaged 37 a day. Then, through December, the average was 30 per day. Researchers noted they didn’t know if all requests resulted in abortions.

Source: Voice of America