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"Women Deliver"
Conference Won't Allow NRLC to Deliver Motherhood-Celebrating
Materials
Part One of Two By
Joel Pavelski
NRLC Communications
Part Two is another example from Great Britain of what we
might have under ObamaCare here at home. Please also be sure to
read National Right to Life News Today (www.nationalrighttolifenews.org).
Please send all of your comments to
daveandrusko@gmail.com.
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Attendees from around the
world streamed into the Walter E. Washington Convention Center
in the nation's capitol on Wednesday morning for the third day
of the second global Women Deliver conference, carrying pink
bags with the inscription: "Celebrate Motherhood." But
conference organizers made sure the pink bags, and the
information they contained, barely made it inside the doors.
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The National Right to
Life bags -
as confiscated by "Women Deliver" staff |
The bags were offered by a
small band of staffers and interns led by Jeanne Head, R.N, an
experienced labor and delivery nurse, who serves as National
Right to Life Vice President for International Affairs and also
NRL's United Nations Representative. They arrived outside the
convention center at 8 am, and were promptly asked to move
across the street.
After about an hour, an attendee from Uganda walked across the
street to ask for another bag. She had actually wanted to read
the contents, she said. It was at this point that the staffers
discovered from the Ugandan attendee that conference organizers
were confiscating the bags and throwing them away.
According to the Ugandan
attendee, conference organizers were heard telling attendees
that the pink bags contained information that was
"anti-human-rights," "anti-choice," "anti-life," and
"anti-woman."
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A "Women Deliver"
staffer stopping attendees with
NRLC bags as they enter the convention center |
And so it was for that
hour that the staff was outside the convention center: attendees
received the pink bags, walked across the street, and only to be
required to dispose of them inside the building by conference
organizers. (And from that point on, conference organizers began
inspecting every bag being brought in because, in their words,
the conference had been "infiltrated by anti-abortionists.")
What was inside the pink bags
that warranted such an immediate, censorious response?
The "Celebrate Motherhood"
bags contained a small plastic fetal model of a 12-week-old
unborn child, a small replication of an unborn child's feet at
10 weeks gestation, a brochure on prenatal development, and a
brochure containing information on proven means of reducing
maternal mortality rates worldwide (the supposed focus of the
conference). "Many
international people really loved the information," said Andrew
Bair, one of the interns passing out the literature. "There were
two women who loved the [12-week-old] baby models."
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The
"anti-human-rights" contents of the bag. |
Head managed to negotiate
the return of the confiscated materials from convention center
security – if she came back at 5 pm once the conference was
over. "There is
nothing in this bag that tells anyone whether or not to have an
abortion," Head said, "It's fetal development, medical facts,
and a fetal model. They celebrate motherhood, and taking them is
a violation of free speech. And it's certainly anti-choice and
anti-woman by denying attendees access to the full range of
information on this vital subject."
The three-day Women Deliver
conference, co-sponsored by organizations that included United
Nations Population Fund, USAID, UNICEF, the World Health
Organization and the International Planned Parenthood
Federation, says on its website that the goal for the event is
"delivering solutions for women and girls." In practice, this
means promoting abortion around the world.
The website also says that
this year's conference will "expand on Women Deliver's hallmark
of inclusivity, reaching out to new partners and new
communities." But
apparently, if you can't include them, just find them,
confiscate them, and trash them. It seems that for the
organizers of Women Deliver 2010, inclusivity applies only to
people who agree with their political platform.
Part Two |