Privacy Policy
Home | Money | Entertainment | Links | Advertise | Search | Cartoons | Contact | Shop February 13, 2012
Web
NewsMax.com
Powered by
 
U.N. Still Pushing Abortion as a 'Development Goal'
By Austin Ruse, C-FAM
Friday, March 18, 2005
The United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) on Thursday wrapped up a two-day conference laying out the U.N.'s strategy for the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in preparation for a major progress review this September. Conference participants agreed that the MDGs need to be expanded to include a broad feminist agenda, including universal access to reproductive health care, which in some U.N. circles includes abortion.

Story Continues Below

 

France Donnay, chief of the Reproductive Health Branch of the U.N. Population Fund (UNFPA), said that "reproductive health and rights are at the core of life for every human being" and "include...the means to avoid unwanted pregnancies." She also said that "universal access to reproductive health, including family planning, is the starting point" for achieving the MDGs, and "sexual and reproductive health...should be included in universal health care" within countries.

Lynn Freedman, lead author of a key U.N.-commissioned report on reducing maternal mortality, recommended the addition of a new target under the maternal mortality goal, to achieve "universal access to reproductive health" by 2015.

Norway's Ambassador Johan Lovald said, "We support the proposal in the task force report on child mortality and maternal health to establish a specific target on access to sexual and reproductive health by 2015 through the universal health care system." Canada also welcomed the idea of including reproductive health within the MDGs.

Charlotte Bunch, Executive Director of the Center for Women's Global Leadership, also agreed that that the MDGs must include "sexual and reproductive rights," "which were so central to all the conferences in the 1990s but are missing from the MDGs." Specifically, the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action and the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) must be incorporated into the MDGs because both provide "norms and strategies" that "forward women's rights." Both documents have been used by U.N. agencies and activist groups to promote abortion.

Bunch also emphasized that "the mechanisms for enforcement of these norms must be strengthened" through means such as the CEDAW committee. The CEDAW committee has continually pressured countries to liberalize their abortion laws.

The U.N. Secretary General's progress report on the MDGs will be released on Monday, March 21, 2005. Columbia Law Professor Jeffrey Sachs, head of the U.N.'s Millennium Project Task Force advising the Secretary General in drafting his report, told conference participants that achieving the MDGs required investing in people "by providing health, education, nutrition, and family planning."

Copyright 2005 - C-FAM (Catholic Family & Human Rights Institute). Permission granted for unlimited use. Credit required.

Editor's note:

  • "Live Free or Die" – get the T-shirt – Click Here Now!
  • Ronald Reagan's Motto: "It CAN Be Done" – get his Oval Office desk plate – Click Here Now
  • Drink coffee with Reagan and Bush – Click Here Now

    Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:

    Castro/Cuba

  • Home | Money | Entertainment | Links | Advertise | Search | Cartoons | Contact | Shop
    All Rights Reserved © 2012 NewsMax.Com

    103-103-103