Intro
The decision of the Court of Appeal in Consolidated Appeals of Ann Kioko & Kenya Christian Professionals Forum & Another v PAK & Others, Civil Appeal No. E029 of 2022 and Attorney General & Others v PAK & Salim Mohammed & Others, Civil Appeal No. E030 of 2022 marks one of the most consequential constitutional pronouncements on reproductive rights in Kenya since the promulgation of the 2010 Constitution. Delivered in April 2026, the judgment overturned the 2022 High Court decision in PAK & Another v Attorney General & 3 Others, thereby significantly narrowing the judicial interpretation of abortion-related rights under Kenyan constitutional law.
The appellate
court’s decision has reignited national and international debate concerning the
relationship between constitutionalism, reproductive autonomy, criminal law,
public health policy, and judicial interpretation. Beyond its immediate legal
effect, the ruling raises broader jurisprudential questions concerning the
scope of socio-economic rights, the role of courts in constitutional
transformation, and the tension between moral conservatism and rights-based
constitutional adjudication.
Background
to the Dispute
The dispute
arose from criminal proceedings instituted against a minor identified as PAK
and a healthcare provider following a medically induced termination of
pregnancy that allegedly resulted in medical complications. The prosecution was
founded upon sections 158, 159, and 160 of the Penal Code, which criminalise
unlawful abortion in Kenya.
The
petitioners challenged the legality and constitutionality of the arrests,
prosecution, and broader treatment they received from state agencies. In 2022,
the High Court at Malindi delivered a landmark judgment recognising that access
to abortion-related healthcare, under certain circumstances, fell within the
protection of several constitutional guarantees, including:
- the right to dignity under
Article 28;
- the right to privacy under
Article 31;
- the right to the highest
attainable standard of health under Article 43; and
- freedom from cruel, inhuman, and
degrading treatment under Article 29.
The High
Court further condemned the criminalisation of women seeking reproductive
healthcare and criticised the withdrawal of the Ministry of Health’s Standards
and Guidelines on Reducing Maternal Mortality and Morbidity from Unsafe
Abortion.
The Attorney
General, together with conservative advocacy groups including the Kenya
Christian Professionals Forum, appealed the decision.
The
Constitutional Question Before the Court
At the centre
of the appeal was the interpretation of Article 26(4) of the Constitution of
Kenya, which provides:
\text{Article
26(4): Abortion is not permitted unless, in the opinion of a trained health
professional, there is need for emergency treatment, or the life or health of
the mother is in danger, or if permitted by any other written law.}
The principal
issue before the Court of Appeal was whether this provision creates a
constitutionally protected reproductive right capable of judicial enforcement
or merely establishes a limited exception to the general prohibition against
abortion.
The Court
adopted the latter interpretation.
The Court
of Appeal’s Interpretation of Article 26(4)
The Court of
Appeal firmly rejected the proposition that abortion constitutes a standalone
constitutional right in Kenya. In its reasoning, the Court emphasised that the
Constitution primarily protects the right to life under Article 26(1), and that
Article 26(4) merely carves out narrowly defined exceptions where abortion may
lawfully occur.
The Court
criticised the High Court for what it viewed as an expansive and policy-driven
interpretation of constitutional rights. According to the appellate judges, the
High Court improperly elevated reproductive autonomy above the constitutional
protection of unborn life and effectively created rights not expressly
contemplated by the constitutional text.
The judgment
therefore reaffirmed the continued enforceability of the Penal Code provisions
criminalising abortion outside the circumstances expressly recognised under
Article 26(4).
From a
constitutional interpretation standpoint, the Court adopted a textual and
restrictive approach rather than the transformative and purposive interpretive
framework that has often characterised post-2010 constitutional jurisprudence
in Kenya.
Reinstatement
of Criminal Proceedings
Another
critical aspect of the judgment concerned the propriety of the High Court’s
intervention in pending criminal proceedings. The Court of Appeal held that the
High Court prematurely halted prosecutions without sufficient evidentiary basis
demonstrating abuse of prosecutorial discretion or violation of constitutional
rights.
The appellate
court reiterated the principle that constitutional litigation should not
ordinarily be used to circumvent criminal trial processes unless exceptional
circumstances are demonstrated. Consequently, the criminal proceedings before
the Kilifi Magistrate’s Court were reinstated.
This aspect
of the decision reflects judicial caution against constitutional petitions
becoming substitutes for ordinary criminal adjudication.
Jurisprudential
Significance of the Decision
The decision
carries substantial implications for Kenyan constitutional law and reproductive
rights jurisprudence.
1.
Restrictive Interpretation of Socio-Economic Rights
The judgment
signals a notable judicial retreat from the expansive interpretation of
socio-economic and reproductive rights that had emerged in several post-2010
constitutional cases. By limiting abortion access strictly to the textual
confines of Article 26(4), the Court narrowed the interpretive space previously
available for rights-based reproductive healthcare claims.
The ruling
may therefore influence future litigation involving reproductive autonomy,
healthcare access, and bodily integrity.
2.
Reinforcement of Penal Regulation
The decision
restores legal centrality to the Penal Code provisions governing abortion.
Healthcare providers now operate within a more uncertain legal environment,
particularly where questions arise concerning what constitutes danger to the
life or health of the mother, emergency treatment, or lawful medical
discretion.
The practical
consequence may be increased defensive medical practice, reluctance by
practitioners to provide reproductive healthcare services, and greater fear of
criminal prosecution.
3.
Constitutional Morality versus Public Morality
The case also
reflects the continuing tension between constitutional morality and societal or
religious morality within Kenyan jurisprudence. While the Constitution protects
individual rights and freedoms, courts continue to confront politically and
morally sensitive questions where public opinion remains sharply divided.
The Court’s
reasoning demonstrates a judicial preference for constitutional restraint in
morally contested areas, effectively leaving broader policy reform to
Parliament rather than the judiciary.
Public
Health and Human Rights Implications
Critics of
the decision argue that restrictive abortion jurisprudence may inadvertently
increase unsafe abortions and maternal mortality rates, particularly among
vulnerable women and girls with limited access to healthcare services. Concerns
have also been raised regarding the chilling effect on healthcare providers who
may hesitate to offer medically necessary treatment for fear of criminal
liability.
Human rights
organisations have further argued that criminalisation disproportionately
affects economically disadvantaged women who lack access to private healthcare
or legal support.
Conversely,
supporters of the ruling contend that the decision faithfully upholds the
constitutional protection of life and prevents judicial overreach into matters
that should properly be determined through democratic legislative processes.
Prospects
for Supreme Court Review
Given the
constitutional significance of the issues involved, the matter is likely to
proceed to the Supreme Court of Kenya. Should the Supreme Court hear the
appeal, it will have an opportunity to clarify several unresolved
constitutional questions, including:
- the scope of reproductive rights
under the Constitution;
- the relationship between the
right to life and women’s autonomy;
- the legal meaning of “health”
under Article 26(4);
- the extent of judicial authority
in constitutional rights expansion; and
- the constitutional limits of
criminal regulation in reproductive healthcare.
The eventual
determination by the Supreme Court may become the definitive authority on
abortion jurisprudence in Kenya for decades to come.
Conclusion
The Court of
Appeal’s decision in Ann Kioko & Kenya Christian Professionals Forum v
PAK & Others represents a defining moment in Kenya’s constitutional and
reproductive rights jurisprudence. By rejecting abortion as an independent
constitutional right and reaffirming the continued force of criminal
prohibitions, the Court adopted a conservative interpretive posture that
prioritises textual constitutional limits and legislative authority.
Nevertheless,
the judgment leaves unresolved practical and constitutional tensions concerning
healthcare access, medical discretion, and the balance between state regulation
and individual autonomy. As public debate intensifies and the possibility of
Supreme Court review looms, the case is poised to remain at the centre of
Kenya’s constitutional discourse on reproductive rights, public morality, and
the future direction of transformative constitutionalism.