Australian troops sent home from Middle East for getting pregnant
• Servicewomen sent home from Middle East
• Blanket sex ban for troops while on deployment
• Aussies better behaved than British troops
FOUR female troops have been sent home from the Middle East after getting pregnant.
All female soldiers are pregnancy tested before they leave Australia and fraternisation is banned on operations, but that didn't stop the four from finding a way to conceive.
The Australian Defence Force said all troops on overseas duty were counselled about safe sex and contraception before they left Australia and they would be doubly reminded of those principles in future.
Australian troops are much better behaved than their British counterparts - last year more than 100 British female soldiers were sent home for being unable to say no to a man in uniform.
Defence did not say if any of the pregnancies had actually occurred on operations.
"It is, however, possible that they could fall pregnant in the period immediately prior to departure or while on mid-deployment leave and, if this is the case, they will be returned to Australia," a Defence spokesman said.
StHe said condoms and contraceptive pills were available free of charge from medical staff and female troops are advised to carry enough pills to last them for their entire overseas posting.
As soon as pregnancy was detected in a woman in uniform she was removed from the conflict zone.
"Upon discovery that an ADF servicewoman is pregnant whilst on operations, she is returned to Australia as soon as practicable in an attempt to protect the pregnancy," the spokesman said.
"Servicewomen are routinely provided contraceptive advice that is reinforced during the pre-deployment medical."
The women are eligible for 14 weeks paid and 12 months unpaid maternity leave, and all their medical costs are paid for by taxpayers.
There are about 220 women serving in the Middle East at present alongside 2100 men.
British top brass have been forced to place advertisements in army newspapers advising women soldiers, nurses and administrative staff to carry condoms.
As well as more than 100 female troops being sent home, another 31 have been impregnated by squaddies on operations in Afghanistan since 2003 and 10 were evacuated between April and November last year after 100 pregnancy test kits were sent to the front.
The Australian Defence Force takes the issue of pregnancy very seriously and a health directive from the Director-General of Defence Health Service states that pregnant members are not considered fit for operational or sea-going service.
"Defence takes great interest in the health and well-being of their members and therefore seeks to protect the pregnant woman and her unborn child from any operational or environmental hazards which may not be conducive to her health," it said.
"Female members are routinely advised that pregnancy inhibits their ability to deploy and are actively screened prior to deployment."
Diggers on patrol in Iraq. All servicemen and women are banned from sexual relationships while on deployment / The Australian
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