UN Commission on Population and
Development, 43rd Session
Part One of
Two
By Jeanne E. Head, RN & Rai
Rojas
Good evening.
Part Two today takes apart
the silly notion that pro-lifers
would be as involved this
November as in previous years.
And "National Right to Life News
Today" (www.nationalrighttolifenewstoday.org)
, among other items, provides a
new perspective on "You Don't
Know Jack." Please send your
thoughts and comments to
daveandrusko@gmail.com.
The
forty-third session of the
Commission on Population and
Development (CPD) convened at
the United Nations in New York
City on April 12 and ended on
April 16, 2010. The initial
working draft document seemed to
be more balanced and reasonable
than others in past years, and
certainly less contentious than
the one from the 42nd session of
the Commission in 2009.
On the first day of the meetings
this year it appeared that it
would certainly not be as
chaotic as last year. But things
quickly changed.
The theme of last year's CPD was
the 15-year review of the1994
International Conference on
Population and Development held
in Cairo. As expected, there was
a clear attempt to push the
pro-abortion agenda beyond
previously agreed upon language
in United Nations documents.
Although flawed, the Programme
of Action established at the
Cairo Conference did not
establish a right to abortion.
In fact, that document states
that it does not create any new
human rights and that abortion
cannot be promoted as a method
of family planning.
Last year, because of the
outrageous and numerous attempts
to insert language in order to
push the abortion agenda beyond
the Cairo agreements, there were
marathon negotiating sessions of
the delegates from member
nations which ended in deadlock
and no agreement between the
delegates.
In order to avoid total failure,
the chairwoman of the 2009
commission and her facilitator
produced a hastily formulated
and very problematic draft for
approval by member states, which
was not the result of consensus
by the delegates in their
negotiations. It was ultimately
approved only after crucial
amendments, which were demanded
by one delegate who refused to
join consensus without them.
With those amendments the
document was in agreement with
the abortion neutral language
from the Cairo conference.
At this year's meeting,
initially it appeared that there
was going to be a genuine
attempt to produce a final
document that would truly
reflect the theme of this year's
Commission meeting: Health,
Morbidity and Development. There
didn't seem to be a big push to
further promote the abortion
agenda.
The draft document wasn't
perfect, but it was sensible.
Moreover, unlike last year, the
speeches from the podium to the
delegates also reflected a
balanced approach to improving
health care and to achieve the
UN's goals of reducing child
mortality, improving maternal
health and combating HIV/AIDS,
Malaria and other diseases.
Dr. Carissa F. Etienne,
Assistant Director General for
Health Systems and Services for
the World Health Organization
gave a speech with a very
reasonable approach to reducing
maternal mortality and
morbidity. Her speech, as did
the proposed working document,
focused on measures to decrease
maternal mortality which have
saved women's lives in the
developed world for over seventy
years. These include
strengthening of health systems
to make good maternal health
care available, as well as
prenatal, postnatal care,
skilled birth attendants,
emergency obstetric care,
antibiotics, clean blood and
good nutrition.
In other words, the lack of
modern medicine and quality
health care, not the prohibition
of abortion, results in high
maternal mortality rates. Even
the pro-abortion Guttmacher
Institute once admitted that
legalized abortion actually
leads to more abortions. It has
been documented over and over
that in the developing world
where maternal health care is
poor, legalization of abortion
increases the number of women
who die or are harmed by
abortion.
However, the statements and
pleas from the Americans and
European Union countries
signaled what was to come, and
how far they would go in
promoting the abortion agenda.
The focus of these countries was
on "reproductive health" and
rights (which they claim
includes the legalization of
abortion) as the way to save
women's lives. Their speeches
were so wrought with propaganda
and sometimes blatant
inaccuracies, that Jeanne Head
requested and was granted the
opportunity to make an
intervention (speech) with the
strategic aim of steering the
commission back on track and to
clear up the misinformation.
There were many proposed
amendments to the document
during the first two days of the
Commission, and they were
disproportionately related to
reproductive health and
reproductive rights and
abortion. This turned the
initial six-page document into a
twenty page document that
contained over 30 references to
reproductive health, sexual and
reproductive health and rights,
reproductive health services or
abortion.
Then we experienced déjà vu all
over again. Just as in the
previous year's negotiations,
this year's went into the early
morning hours. The marathon
sessions lasted until 4:15 AM on
Friday – the last day of the
meeting--and again ended in
failure to produce an agreed
document. The meeting was
recessed until noon.
This is when, once again, a
hastily written document was
produced by the Chairman of the
Commission. But this time,
although flawed, it was more
reasonable and--like the
original document from the start
of the week--provided a fairly
balanced approach in keeping
with this year's theme.
However, several delegations,
most notably those from Cuba,
South Africa, and Brazil,
refused to accept this new
document presented by the chair.
Incredibly, at the last hour,
the document was opened for
debate. An hour passed and an
agreed upon "package" of
paragraphs were added to the
document after frantic
negotiations.
There were fourteen new
paragraphs in all, five of which
related to sexual and
reproductive health and
reproductive rights. Some were
taken from last year's document.
In the end, however, the United
Nations Population Fund and
other pro-abortion organizations
and member states (including
Obama's hand-picked pro-abortion
American delegation) failed to
advance their abortion agenda.
This was in part due to the
persistence and endurance of
many pro-life delegates and the
pro-life NGOs (non-governmental
organizations) including NRLC's
own representatives.
But sadly, as has been the case
since the new American
Administration took hold,
ideology trumped common sense
and the more balanced and
reasonable approach was lost.
Many delegations and
pro-abortion NGOs showed us that
they care more about promoting
their abortion agenda than
actually saving the lives of
women and children.
Jeanne E. Head, R.N., is NRLC's
Vice President for International
Affairs and UN Representative.
NRL's Educational Trust Fund has
Special Consultative Status with
the UN Economic and Social
Council (ECOSOC) as a
Non-Governmental Organization--a
subsidiary body of the UN
General Assembly. Jeanne was the
first representative at the UN
in New York for the
International Right to Life
Federation when it received its
ECOSOC status in 1987 and still
serves in that capacity as well.
Rai Rojas is NRLC's Director of
Hispanic Outreach and he has
worked with Latin-American
delegations at the United
Nations since 1993 in his
capacity as a NGO representative
for National Right to Life.
Part Two |