|
Inter Press Service, April 6,
2005
WORLD HEALTH
DAY: U.S. Pursues Disruptive Anti-Abortion
Agenda
Author : Thalif Deen
On the eve of World Health Day, the United States
has once again raised the politically divisive
issue of abortion, refusing to reaffirm the
landmark Programme of Action unanimously adopted
at the 1994 International Conference on Population
and Development in Cairo.
UNITED NATIONS, Apr 6 (IPS) - As expected, the
United States has once again raised the politically
divisive issue of abortion at a crucial U.N.
meeting here, refusing to reaffirm the landmark
Programme of Action unanimously adopted at
the 1994 International Conference on Population
and Development (ICPD) in Cairo.
According to an amendment introduced by the United
States, Washington has indicated its willingness
to support the ICPD programme of action only
with the understanding that nothing therein
creates a right to abortion.
As everyone knows, the Cairo conference
made it clear that abortion was a national
matter, not an international matter,
a Third World delegate told IPS.
The (George W.) Bush administration is
obviously bent on sabotaging these post-Cairo
meetings with a politically sensitive issue
that was settled as far back as 1994,
he added.
Werner Fornos, president of the Washington-based
Population Institute, said that paragraph 8.25
of the unanimously adopted 1994 Cairo Programme
of Action clearly states that in no case
should abortion be promoted as a method of
family planning.
What could be more precise or concise than
that? he asked.
Once again the Bush administration throws
raw meat to placate fundamentalist zealots
who use the abortion issue as a backdoor ploy
to suppress family planning, Fornos told
IPS.
The U.S. move also came on the eve of World Health
Day Thursday, whose slogan this year is Make
Every Mother and Child Count in light
of alarming figures showing that women in the
poorest countries face a one in 16 risk of
dying during pregnancy or childbirth.
U.N. experts note that providing family planning
could reduce maternal mortality by 25 percent.
According to several delegates, the U.S. decision
to block consensus on the resolution is being
backed by at least four countries: Costa Rica,
Nicaragua, Qatar and Egypt.
Fornos said it is unfortunate that a small group
of nations buys into this transparent
subterfuge by the United States.
I am particularly dismayed that Egypt --where
the historic Cairo conference was held --has
chosen to join a cozy coalition of the unwilling
in a retrogressive reversal of reason,
he added.
The resolution, which among other things reaffirms
the ICPD programme of action, was expected
to be adopted by consensus at the end of a
one-week meeting of the U.N. Commission on
Population and Development (CPD) which began
Apr.4 and is expected to conclude Apr 8.
The theme of the CPD session is population, development
and HIV/AIDS, with particular emphasis on poverty.
The commission is also expected to discuss the
implementation of ICPD programme of action
and the achievement of the internationally-agreed
development goals, including those contained
in the Millennium Declaration adopted in September
2000.
But the Bush administration, which draws strong
support from right-wing Christian fundamentalists,
has been trying to hijack the CPD meeting --
as it has done at several previous meetings
-- by raising the issue of abortion.
At a two-week U.N. conference aimed at taking
stock of the 1995 Fourth World Conference on
Women, the Bush administration pressed its
anti-abortion agenda, triggering strong protests
from developing nations and from non-governmental
organisations (NGOs).
The anti-abortion issue threatened to also disrupt
that meeting, held at U.N. headquarters last
month, whose primary agenda was to advance
women's equality.
Although the U.S. delegation subsequently dropped
the amendment, the New York Times said the
damage by then had already been
done.
An apology is due from the United States
delegation for the weeklong disruption it caused,
the Times said in an editorial titled 'The
Bush Team's Abortion Misstep.'
At a moment when the United States should
be leading the world on advancing women's equality,
the Bush administration chose instead to alienate
government ministers and 6,000 other delegates
at an important U.N. conference on that issue
with a burst of anti-abortion zealotry,
the editorial added.
Addressing the CPD session Monday, the Executive
Director of the U.N. Population Fund (UNFPA)
Thoraya Obaid told delegates that governments
in all regions have reaffirmed their commitment
to the ICPD programme of action, and to the
achievement of universal access to reproductive
health by the year 2015.
They have acknowledged that the issues
of population and reproductive health are central
to the Millennium Declaration, and to the creation
of a world where people live free from fear
and free from want, in dignity and in peace,
she said.
Obaid also pointed out that the Cairo agenda
makes a significant contribution to the
reduction of poverty and the achievement of
the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
The MDGs include a 50 percent reduction in poverty
and hunger; universal primary education; reduction
of child mortality by two-thirds; cutbacks
in maternal mortality by three-quarters; the
promotion of gender equality; and the reversal
of the spread of HIV/AIDS, malaria and other
diseases.
A summit meeting of 189 world leaders in September
2000 pledged to meet all of these goals by
the year 2015. But their implementation has
depended primarily on increased development
aid by Western donors.
A second summit meeting, scheduled to take place
in New York in September this year, will review
the progress made so far and set the world's
development agenda for the next decade.
Obaid said that the greatest improvements in
reducing extreme poverty have been registered
in East Asia and South Asia, where more than
200 million people have been lifted out of
poverty since 1990 alone.
She said that guaranteeing access to family planning
alone could reduce maternal mortality by 25
percent and child mortality by up to 20 percent.
Five years into the new millennium, we
have an unprecedented opportunity to make the
right to development a reality, Obaid
added.
The ICPD programme of action estimated that carrying
out programmes in the area of reproductive
health and the collection and analysis of population
data would cost about 17 billion dollars annually
by the year 2000 and 18.5 billion dollars by
2005.
Approximately two-thirds of the projected costs
would come from developing countries, and about
one-third from the international donor community.
According to the latest figures, Obaid said,
donors provided an estimated 4.5 billion dollars
in 2004, up from 2.6 billion dollars in 2000,
and projections for 2005 are encouraging.
I urge donors to remain on track to reach
the 2005 target by living up to their commitments
and continuing to increase funding levels as
promised, she added.
<< Inter Press Service -- 4/6/05 >>
Send this page to a
friend!
Home About
Us Newsletters News
Archives Donate
|