>>Marie Stopes International: Jeopardizing African Women
>>Department of Health and Human Services (HHS): Expanding the Refusal Clause
>>UNFPA: The seven-year freeze
>>Global Gag Rule: Stifling free speech
>>The New Litmus Test: Limiting free speech, compromising sound practices
>>International Family Planning and Reproductive Health Services: Cutting back aid
>>Beijing at 10: U.S. trying to undermine international agreement on women
>>ICPD: Negating international agreements
>>Essential Medicines: Trying to block WHO's efforts to decrease unsafe abortion
>>Iraqi Women: Putting anti-feminists in charge of gender equality
>>Adolescents: Censoring sexuality education
>>CEDAW: Putting the brakes on women's rights
>>Conference on HIV/AIDS: Stifling medical views on combating HIV
>>Lone Voice of Dissent: Opposing the right to health
>>Refugee Women: Denying critical services
Last Punches: USAID Undermines Access to Contraceptives
In the waning days of the Bush
Administration, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) is
undermining its own investments by pressuring several African governments to
stop providing Marie Stopes International (MSI) with the contraceptives
purchased by the United
States.
The October 2008 decision will further jeopardize women's access to contraception,
particularly in six Sub-Saharan African countries, at a time when more than 200
million women worldwide do not have access to the contraception they
need.
Women have the right to high quality health services, and the U.S. government
has committed to providing them. Allowing women to go without the means to
prevent pregnancies they do not want is intolerable. In the six countries in
question (Ghana, Malawi, Sierra
Leone, Tanzania,
Uganda, and Zimbabwe) there
are few alternatives. MSI provides 15 to 25 percent of the contraception
nationally, and it is the only organization that reaches women living in rural
areas.
Expanding the Refusal Clause: Politics above Patients
All people deserve access to health care services and
information - yet the Bush Administration is attempting to undermine that
access in its last months in office.
Harmful new regulations proposed by the Administration would give
certain health care providers new authority to withhold treatment, counseling,
and/or medical information without regard for patient needs and rights.
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) argues
that the proposed regulations
are consistent with three federal laws allowing health care providers to
refuse-based on their religious or moral beliefs-to provide abortions, tubal
ligations and/or vasectomies for their patients. The regulations are
written broadly, and could be applied to the provision of contraceptives and
other health services, and beyond protecting health care professionals, they
apply to every worker as well as whole health care systems and insurance
plans. The regulations go so far that
patient's needs are not taken into account.
The supposed purpose of the regulations is to help clarify
the law, though in reality they will create even greater ambiguity and
confusion in the more than 580,000 medical facilities across the country to
which these regulations would apply. In addition, there are
well-founded concerns that the regulations can be interpreted to apply to
international organizations, including the United Nations and the Global Fund
to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.
After receiving more than 200,000 public comments in
opposition to the proposed regulation, the HHS is supposed to take those into
account before make a decision about next steps. According to the Administration's own
procedure, the decision one way or another should be made in early November.
UNFPA: The seven-year freeze
On June 26, 2008, for the seventh time, President Bush refused to
release funds appropriated by Congress for the United Nations
Population Fund (UNFPA)—the world's largest family planning and
reproductive health provider for women.
In 2002, the President first denied UNFPA funding in the total of
$34 million, citing unsubstantiated claims by an anti-family planning
group that the agency supported coerced abortion and sterilization in
China. In each of the next six years, he also blocked Congressional
funding intended for UNFPA, blocking a total of nearly $200 million for
the agency at a time when more than half a million women die as a
result of pregnancy or childbirth every year, and more than 200 million
couples lack access to contraception. Four separate investigative
teams-including one dispatched by the U.S. State Department-have found
the Administration's charges against UNFPA to be groundless. But
despite the lack of evidence, and even as outrage over the funding
refusal grows among the American people, the Administration refuses to
change its position, thereby denying safe motherhood services,
contraceptives, fistula repair, and HIV/AIDS prevention to women in 140
developing countries worldwide. Click here for more information about the UNFPA funding freeze.
Global Gag Rule: Stifling free speech
This Reagan-era policy, reinstated by President Bush on January 22,
2001, requires that in exchange for U.S. assistance for family planning
services, foreign nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) receiving money
through the United States Agency for International Development (USAID)
must withhold information from women about the option of legal abortion
and where to obtain safe abortion services-even if they use only their
own funds to do so. Additionally, the groups cannot engage in any
public debate or disseminate any information regarding the health
hazards of unsafe abortion, express support for any existing laws that
support safe abortion, or provide legal abortion services with non-U.S.
funding. This policy stifles free speech and prevents medical
professionals from offering the full range of legal, medically
acceptable options to women. It is contrary to U.S. law and would be
held unconstitutional if imposed on U.S.-based organizations.
On August 29, 2003, President Bush went even further, extending the
Global Gag Rule to apply to foreign NGOs that receive money through the
U.S. Department of State. Organizations that receive such funding serve
some of the most vulnerable women in the world-refugees and migrants
displaced by war and civil unrest. In FY 2004, the Senate attempted to
expose the Global Gag Rule's legal exceptionalism and limits on free
speech through a provision to the FY 2004 foreign operations
appropriations bill. Additional attempts to overturn and modify the
Global Gag Rule have also been met with veto threats-and without the
Congressional support to override the veto, the policy remains in
place. Click here for more information about the Global Gag Rule, including action opportunities.
The New Litmus Test: Limiting free speech, compromising sound practices
According to a June 10, 2005 directive issued by the Bush
administration, all nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) receiving US foreign
assistance to address HIV/AIDS must
adopt an organizational policy "explicitly opposing prostitution." At first blush this may seem harmless, but it
stands in the way of free speech, public health practice and puts organizations
in a terrible position of undermining their relationship with those they are
trying to serve by reducing sex workers' vulnerability to HIV.
This damaging "anti prostitution loyalty oath"
infringes on organizations' right to free speech, and undermines global efforts
to eradicate sex trafficking, work respectfully and effectively with commercial
sex workers, and prevent the spread of HIV. It contradicts accepted public
health practices: condemning sex workers' livelihoods presents a significant
obstacle to gaining the trust necessary to reach them with education, health
services, and viable economic alternatives. No concrete steps for addressing
the poverty, discrimination, and powerlessness that lead to sexual exploitation
are offered. Initially, this provision only applied to foreign NGOs, but the
2005 directive extended it to U.S.-based groups as well.
In separate lawsuits brought by U.S. organizations, two district
courts have ruled that restricting the privately-funded speech of U.S.-based
organizations is unconstitutional (DKT
International v. USAID and Alliance for
Open Society, Inc. v. USAID).
While a three-judge panel overturned the DKT ruling in February 2007,
the other appeal is still pending.
To avoid further rulings against the government policy, USAID and the
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) issued guidelines
for HIV prevention funding recipients in the summer of 2007. HHS has since developed these guidelines into
a proposed regulation that is currently in the public comment process. They state that U.S.-based recipients can set
up affiliates with private funding that do not have an anti-prostitution
policy, provided there is "adequate separation" of the recipient and
affiliate. This includes the onerous
requirement of complete physical and financial separation, including "separate
personnel, management, and governance."
Moreover, USAID and HHS maintain the right to determine "on a
case-by-case basis...whether sufficient physical and financial separation
exists." In other words, no recipient
can be completely assured that its affiliation is separate enough, because no
firm standard is set by the guidance.
In August 2008, a district court
found that "the Guidelines require more separation than is reasonably
necessary to satisfy the government's legitimate interest," and that "the
Policy Requirement and the Guidelines...impermissibly compel speech." Moreover, the court granted an injunction
preventing the U.S.
government from enforcing the prostitution pledge policy with any of the
plaintiffs or their member organizations until the case is settled. The injunction does not apply to foreign-based
NGOs, who still need to comply with the anti-prostitution loyalty oath.
International Family Planning and Reproductive Health Services: Cutting back aid
In a clear indication of the United States' dwindling leadership on
women's health, President Bush has consistently undermined family
planning and reproductive health programs through his budget requests.
Most recently, his FY2008 budget request called for a $70 million cut
in funding for international family planning and reproductive health
programs. His FY 2007 budget for the first time did not contain a
specific request for overall funding for international reproductive
health and family planning programs-but did find a way to call for a
$77 million cut from current family planning and reproductive health
services. During his tenure, President Bush has consistently
undervalued international family planning and reproductive health
assistance, flatlining U.S. assistance for reproductive health even as
the number of women of reproductive age grows steadily across the
developing world. Despite increasing rates of HIV infection among women
worldwide, the Administration has also stubbornly refused to recognize
the importance of reproductive health programs in preventing the spread
of HIV/AIDS. Currently, no U.S. funds for HIV/AIDS prevention, care,
and treatment are directed toward strengthening reproductive health
services-women's primary point of contact with their countries' health
systems, and a logical place to provide them with lifesaving
information on HIV/AIDS.
Beijing at 10: U.S. trying to undermine international agreement on women
In March 2005, 130 governments convened at the UN Commission on the
Status of Women (CSW) to review progress on the landmark Beijing
agreement on women's health and rights. Once again, the Bush
Administration stood alone in trying to undermine international
consensus at the United Nations. Rather than working with other
countries on concrete strategies for addressing women's broad health
needs and advancing women's social, economic, and political
opportunities, the U.S. delegation spent a full week focused on its
anti-abortion amendment to the one-page reaffirmation of Beijing. In
spite of vigorous lobbying on the part of the U.S. delegation,
countries of the world stood firm in rejecting the U.S. language.
Eventually, the U.S. had no choice but to withdraw its amendment. This
obstructionist U.S. behavior was particularly ironic given the
Administration's calls for renewed international cooperation during
President Bush and Secretary of State Rice's trip to Europe just weeks
before the CSW. Click here for more information about the Administration's failed attempt to reinterpret the Beijing Platform for Action.
ICPD: Negating international agreements
At a regional planning meeting of the Economic Commission for Latin
America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) in March 2004, the United States was
the only one of 38 country delegations to oppose a declaration to
ensure greater access to reproductive health services, greater efforts
at HIV/AIDS prevention, and the protection of reproductive rights for
all. The meeting was part of a series of regional reviews of the 1994
International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) Programme of Action,
a landmark agreement in which the world's governments, including the
U.S., committed to comprehensive initiatives on women's health and
rights. At the first regional meeting in the series—the Fifth Asian and
Pacific Population Conference, held in Bangkok in December 2002—the
Bush administration had made clear its radical shift in policy by
refusing to reaffirm the importance of progress on women's health and
rights. The U.S. delegation dominated negotiations with an agenda that
ignored the health needs of women and girls over the objections of
every other country present. It incorrectly claimed the terms
"reproductive health services" and "reproductive rights" "promote
abortion." Adhering to a narrow and unproven "abstinence-only until
marriage" policy, it also tried to remove all language citing
"consistent condom use" as a viable way of preventing HIV infection. In
the end, the U.S. position was defeated by a vote of 32-1.
Essential Medicines: Trying to block WHO's efforts to decrease unsafe abortion
At a time when 68,000 women die annually from the consequences of
unsafe abortion and countless others are left with lifelong health
problems, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services stood alone
in trying to block the addition of early pregnancy termination pills to
the World Health Organization's (WHO) essential medicines list.
Abortion is legal under some circumstances in more than 120 countries,
yet heavy restrictions and lack of access to trained providers or
health care facilities still lead 19 million women to seek unsafe
abortions each year. Ninety-seven percent of these abortions take place
in developing countries. In an effort to address this crisis—especially
in countries where the health system does not have the capacity to
provide safe, surgical abortions even under circumstances when it is
legal—an expert committee for the WHO unanimously approved the addition
of the early pregnancy termination pills to the organization's
essential medicines list. Intended for governments worldwide, the list
officially recommends basic drugs doctors should have available. Most
recommended additions to the list are incorporated within days of the
committee's approval, but U.S. lobbying efforts stalled the process for
four months, over the objections of physicians, academics, and public
health leaders from around the world. The pills finally made it onto
the list in July 2005.
Iraqi Women: Putting anti-feminists in charge of gender equality
On September 27, 2004, then-Secretary of State Colin Powell
announced that a portion of a $10 million grant to train and educate
150 women leaders in Iraq would be awarded to the Independent Women's
Forum (IWF). Co-founded by Lynne Cheney, National Review editor and
former Heritage Foundation Vice President for Government Relations Kate
O'Beirne, and others, the IWF is an ultra-conservative organization
with an explicitly anti-feminist track record. Although the
organization is supposed to be promoting equality and democracy for
Iraqi women, it has in fact opposed several key efforts to promote
gender equality in the United States, including the Women's Educational
Equity Act, the Violence Against Women Act, and Title IX, the landmark
federal law that prohibits sex discrimination in education.
Internationally, IWF has opposed key provisions of the Convention on
All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), including women's
right to equal pay for equal work, paid maternity leave and child care
facilities for working mothers, and minimum quotas that would ensure
women's representation at all levels of government.
Adolescents: Censoring sexuality education
The
Bush administration, in an alliance with Iran, Saddam Hussein's Iraq,
Libya, Sudan, Syria, and the Vatican, tried to block consensus on
quality sexuality education at the UN General Assembly Special Session
on Children in May 2002. Success for the U.S. delegation would have
prevented young people under 18 from receiving information about sexual
abuse (despite increased evidence of its frequency), birth control,
condoms, and reproductive health services, including HIV/AIDS
prevention. The Administration favored an unproven abstinence-only
approach, opposing comprehensive information and services for the
millions of adolescents worldwide, many of whom are already sexually
active, including through arranged early marriage or forced sexual
relationships. Click here for more information on Bush administration policies affecting adolescents worldwide, including action opportunities.
CEDAW: Putting the brakes on women's rights
After the Bush administration notified the Senate Committee on Foreign
Relations in 2002 that ratification of the Convention to Eliminate All
Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) was "generally desirable
and should be approved," momentum to ratify it grew. But when the
radical Right complained that the treaty would undermine women's
femininity, the Bush administration tried to put the brakes on,
informing the Committee that a new, "careful review is appropriate and
necessary" and asking that it wait to vote until a review was complete.
The Committee nevertheless voted 12-7 to send CEDAW to the full Senate
for ratification on July 30, 2002, though the full Senate did not vote
on CEDAW—leaving the treaty yet to be ratified. Five years later, the
administration's 2007 treaty priority list sent to the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee lists CEDAW as a treaty "on which the
Administration does not support Senate action at this time."
Conference on HIV/AIDS: Stifling medical views on combating HIV
A
top Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) official imposed
strict quotas on the number of U.S. government scientists permitted to
attend the 2004 International AIDS Conference, cutting U.S. funding by
85 percent since the last international AIDS conference and prohibiting
researchers from using their own research funds to participate. The
prohibition meant that even though the majority of Americans support
U.S. efforts to stop HIV/AIDS overseas, only a fraction of the
government scientists whose research papers were accepted for
presentation were allowed to share their findings with scientists from
the regions of the globe most devastated by HIV. This resulted in the
cancellation of over 40 presentations on such topics as preventing HIV
infection, countering the stigma of AIDS, and monitoring for HIV
resistance. An HHS official said that the decision to restrict the
number of U.S. government participants came "as a result of the
treatment [HHS] Secretary [Tommy Thompson] received in Barcelona…" at a
2002 conference on HIV/AIDS when a handful of AIDS activists
demonstrated against U.S. government policies. Why scientists were
blamed is still unclear.
Lone Voice of Dissent: Opposing the right to health
During
an April 2004 meeting of the UN Commission on Human Rights (UNCHR), the
Bush administration repeatedly tried-and failed-to weaken a unanimous
resolution on the right to health, and was eventually isolated by a
52-1 vote. The administration also tried to delete the word "services"
from the phrase "health care services," claiming that "services" was a
code word for "abortion"—an assertion rejected by a vote of 50-2. This
was the third meeting since 2003 that the U.S. delegation stood alone
in opposing the right to health. At the UN General Assembly in November
2003, the U.S. delegation forced a vote on the universal right to
health, and was the only country to oppose it-by a vote of 166-1. The
Bush administration took a similar position at the 2003 meeting of the
UNCHR in Geneva. Of the 43 countries in attendance, only the U.S.
delegation opposed a resolution urging countries to enhance their
efforts to eliminate discrimination in health care, prevent violence,
promote sexual and reproductive health, take steps to protect the
fundamental right to health for their own citizens, and assist
developing countries in achieving higher standards of health.
Refugee Women: Denying critical services
In
August 2003 the Bush administration officially withdrew funding for a
consortium of eight nongovernmental organizations serving refugee
women—one of the world's most vulnerable and disenfranchised
populations. Since 1995 the consortium has been working, with U.S.
government support, to deliver emergency obstetric care, HIV/AIDS
prevention services, emergency contraception, and education to prevent
violence against women in such war-torn countries as the Democratic
Republic of Congo, Rwanda, and Eritrea. But in October 2002 the Bush
administration put a hold on U.S. funding because of unclear and
unstated concerns about one member of the consortium, Marie Stopes
International. In August 2003, the Administration presented the
consortium with an ultimatum-drop Marie Stopes International or
relinquish all U.S. support. Recognizing that the joint activities of
all the members were crucial to quality care, the consortium chose to
decline U.S. funding. By blocking these funds, the Bush administration
has undermined a concerted effort in the most difficult conditions to
prevent the spread of disease, allow women to give birth safely, and
deliver care to survivors of rape.
>>See Sources: International Actions
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