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Inter Press Service, August 23,
2005
USAID Sued Over
Anti-Prostitution Policy
Author : William Fisher
NEW YORK, Aug 23 (IPS) - A U.S.-based family-planning
charity is formally challenging Washington's
"anti-prostitution" policy, calling
it an unconstitutional infringement of speech
that is undermining international efforts to
stem the spread of HIV/AIDS.
The group, DKT International, filed its lawsuit
in district court against the U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID) and its administrator,
challenging the requirement that U.S. and foreign
non-governmental organisations (NGOs) receiving
USAID funding adopt a policy "explicitly
opposing prostitution and sex trafficking".
USAID adopted the rule requirement in June, as
one of a number of policies advocated by the
"pro-life" religious right. Other
George W. Bush administration initiatives include
endorsement of the so-called Mexico Protocol,
which forbids abortion counseling in family
planning programmes overseas.
U.S. observance of the protocol -- termed "the
global gag rule" by family planning professionals
-- was rescinded during the Bill Clinton administration
(1992-2000) but reauthorised by Bush on his
first day in office in January 2001.
Under the rule, foreign family planning agencies
may not receive U.S. funds if, with their own
funds, they counsel on or refer for abortion,
advocate for more lenient abortion laws in
their own country, or provide abortion services.
DKT's president, Philip D. Harvey, said the anti-prostitution
and sex trafficking policy "does a grave
disservice to international AIDS-prevention
programmes and to those who carry them out.
The policy does no good, and is clearly doing
considerable harm."
He told IPS, "I have found that non-governmental
organisations around the world really despise
this anti-prostitution pledge. In addition
to making their work harder, it undermines
their integrity, insults them really."
DKT International is a non-profit organisation
based in Washington. It manages contraceptive
social marketing programmes for family planning
and AIDS prevention in 11 countries in Africa,
Asia, and Latin America. DKT's programmes currently
serve just under 10 million couples, with an
operating budget of 50 million dollars.
Harvey said ameliorating the impact of HIV/AIDS
requires "work with persons at highest
risk of infection, including those in the sex
trades".
"We deal with sex workers as equals,"
he said. "We accept what they do as part
of the reality of today's world, and we do
our best to empower them so they can adopt
practices that will minimise the risk of HIV
transmission for themselves and their partners
and improve their chances of getting access
to life-saving health services. To do this
work under an 'anti-prostitution' policy would
be dysfunctional."
He added, "Such a policy further stigmatises
the very people we are trying to help. It requires
us to condemn what sex workers do for a living,
thus undermining the relationship of trust
and mutual respect required to effectively
conduct AIDS-prevention work. DKT will not
allow its field workers to be put in that position."
The U.S. policy, he declared, "harms America's
image and America's interests abroad. No one
pretends that such a policy will contain or
ameliorate the darker aspects of the world's
oldest profession. It represents posturing
by American politicians who are increasingly
seen around the world as patronising, bullying,
and obsessed with sex."
"By coercing the speech of private parties,"
he added, "the policy violates the First
Amendment rights -- and the integrity -- of
the organisations that are forced into compliance."
DKT's programs are supported by the Packard,
Hewlett, and Gates Foundations, and by the
German KfW, the British DFID, and the Dutch,
Irish, and Indian governments.
As a result of refusing to adopt USAID's policy
on prostitution, DKT has lost USAID support
for its AIDS-prevention work in Vietnam. Its
lawsuit seeks injunctive relief to permit it
to resume this work.
Meanwhile, in Kabul, Afghanistan, seven reproductive
health care centres formerly supported by the
International Planned Parenthood Federation
(IPPF) were reopened this month with help from
the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA).
Run by a local NGO, the Afghan Family Guidance
Association (AFGA), the clinics were forced
to close in June due to IPPF "funding
problems". IPPF's U.S. affiliate, the
Planned Parenthood Federation of America, did
not respond to telephone calls or emails regarding
the nature of its funding problems.
"The UNFPA funding, 50,000 dollars for the
next six months, is a vital bridging assistance
this year until we are fully registered with
IPPF in 2006 and get our budget from its core
fund," said Ahmad Zeya Yousufzai, AFGA's
executive director.
But according to AFGA, very little is happening
on the issue of reproductive health care outside
the capital, making the challenge and need
for further funding even greater.
Afghanistan has one of the highest maternal mortality
rates in the world, with one woman dying there
every 20 minutes. According to the United Nations
children's agency UNICEF, child mortality is
also very high in the war-ravaged country.
Afghanistan's first national human development
report, released in early March, indicated
that 20 percent of children died before the
age of five.
Yousufzai believes one of the reasons behind
maternal and child mortality, as well as morbidity,
is a lack of family planning and giving birth
to too many children without a gap of two to
three years between each live birth.
AFGA centres receive more than 700 women visitors
each day. The centres offer guidance and services
on family planning, HIV/AIDS awareness, youth
and adolescence, reproductive and sexual health
and gender-based violence advocacy.
Meanwhile, the anti-abortion Population Research
Institute (PRI) is making plans to establish
a pro-life office in Afghanistan "to assist
Afghan women and families in their fight against
the anti-natal agenda of U.N. agencies and
anti-child NGOs".
PRI said, "The recent legalisation of abortion
by Kabul's interim government was the catalystàAbortion
in Afghanistan is now legal up to the third
month of pregnancy. Although, according to
reports, three doctors must certify that the
abortion is a medical necessity, such regulations
have quickly degenerated in other countries
to abortion on demand."
The Bush administration has withheld, for the
third consecutive year, funds earmarked for
UNFPA. It said the 34 million dollars would
be used for other purposes. The decision was
not unexpected, given the administration's
efforts to fire up its Christian-right-wing
base in advance of last November's presidential
election.
UNFPA says it does not support abortion. It believes
that abortion should not be promoted as a method
of family planning. UNFPA promotes improved
access to voluntary family planning to prevent
unwanted pregnancies and eliminate the need
for abortion.
<< Inter Press Service -- 8/23/05 >>
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