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Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN),
June 27, 2005
EDITORIAL: UNFPA
saves lives; Yet U.S. denies it funds again
For as long as he's occupied the White House,
President Bush has been denying U.S. funding
to the U.N. Population Fund, an agency which
is generally thought to have averted more abortions,
assured more safe births and saved the lives
of more mothers and infants than any other
entity on Earth. By denying it U.S. funding,
Bush is fueling the very fire he wants to extinguish:
abortion.
So long as women around the world experience
unwanted pregnancies, it's pretty much certain
that abortion rates will remain lamentably
high. The same goes for poverty- and childbirth-related
death rates.
The surest way to reduce all these troubling
numbers is to guarantee that women everywhere
have access to contraception and other reproductive
health services. Yet as the UNFPA notes, nearly
a quarter-billion women lack such access -
virtually all of them in developing countries.
That quarter-billion signifies more poverty,
more abortions, more maternal and child deaths,
all of which the United States should be clamoring
to help the UNFPA avert. Yet as the years pass,
President Bush has grown more and more steadfast
in his insistence that the United States won't
support UNFPA. His reason? He seems to have
swallowed some serious misinformation alleging
that UNFPA's work in China underwrites forced
abortions there.
Even the president's own investigators found
no proof of UNFPA involvement in such coercive
tactics. The administration shrugged off that
finding last week - accusing the UNFPA of giving
its "seal of approval" to China's
"birth limitation" program and urging
the agency to halt all operations in the country.
The charge is as baseless as the call for withdrawal
is dangerous. As UNFPA chief Thoraya Obaid
frequently notes, the agency's 26-year presence
in China has helped nudge the country to back
away from the coercive policies of the past.
China's deputy U.N. ambassador Zhang Yishan granted
the point last week: With UNFPA's help, he
said, China has launched dozens of population-management
programs based on "advanced-international
concepts" in which strong-arming plays
no part.
That's progress - the sort any fan of freedom
should applaud. Bush nevertheless remains resolved
to withhold this year's $34 million contribution
to the UNFPA. Earlier this month, the House
of Representatives rejected a measure that
would have required the money's transfer.
The Senate, which has yet to consider the matter,
may very well manage a word of protest against
this counterproductive parsimony. But the protest
won't stop abortion or save lives. President
Bush foreclosed that option when he decided
to deny UNFPA funding again.
By deprived the agency of U.S. money, the president
will effectively keep the UNFPA from preventing
thousands of abortions and maternal and child
deaths - not to mention the birth of millions
of children destined to crushing poverty.
And the reason the president favors this is?
<< Star Tribune 6/27/05 >>
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