by
Deal Hudson
February 4,
2008
LifeNews.com
Note: Deal W. Hudson is the director of the Morley Institute for Church
& Culture, and is the former publisher and editor of CRISIS Magazine,
a Catholic monthly. He is the author of six books and his articles
and comments have been published in many newspapers and magazines.
The
mission of the Global Fund is to fight HIV/AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis
around the world. Since 2004, this Swiss organization has received
over $3 billion, one third of its entire budget, from the United States.
A study just released by the Gerard Health Foundation provides evidence
that Global Fund grants are supporting abortion providers in China,
which is a direct violation of the Mexico City Policy.
The President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), the five-year,
$15-billion plan for combating HIV/AIDS expires in 2008. When Congress
considers PEPFAR's reauthorization later this year, it will need to
take a close look at the work of the Global Fund. Appropriate measures
will need to be taken to ensure coercive abortion policies in China
are not being supported by U.S. taxpayers.
Not only do these practices violate the Mexico City Policy, they also
contradict the Congressional intent of the Kemp-Kasten and Helms Amendments.
The Mexico City Policy, reaffirmed by President Bush in January 2001,
requires non-governmental organizations, such as the Global Fund,
to "agree as a condition of their receipt of [U.S.] federal funds"
that they will "neither perform nor actively promote abortion
as a method of family planning in other nations."
China's coercive abortion practices to enforce its one-child policy
are well-known and well-documented. According to the report from the
Gerard Health Foundation, the Global Fund has funded several HIV/AIDS
grant requests from the agency empowered to enforce China's one-child
policy, National Population and Family Planning Commission (NPFPC).
Similar grants have been awarded by the Global Fund to two organizations
that "facilitate NPFPC's activities," the United Nations
Population Fund (UNFPA) and Maria Stopes International.
The United States has withheld contributions from the UNFPA since
2002 because of its participation in China's program of enforced abortion.
Maria Stopes International, a major supplier of abortion around the
world, acknowledges several provinces in China are "major partners."
The Gerard Health Foundation reports, "Programs funded through
the Global Fund exist in all seven provinces that the State Department
has identified as requiring 'termination of pregnancy' if the pregnancy
violates provincial family planning regulations: Anhui, Hebei, Heilongjiang,
Hubei, Hunan, Jilin, and Ningxia."
The participation of China's NPFPC, UNFPA, and Maria Stopes International
in grants from the Global Fund is buried in structures called "Country
Coordinating Mechanisms" (CCMs), by which a country develops
and submits its grant proposals as well as oversees their implementation.
All three organizations are listed as participants in various stages
of China's development of its grant proposal and implementation.
Lest there be any doubt about the intent of these organizations, the
grant from China approved by the Global Fund includes country population
and family planning services in the list of "responsible implanting
agencies."
The amount of Global Fund grants awarded to China for HIV/AIDS prevention
totals $171 million, which means about $58 million of that amount
came from the United States.
Given the recognized ideological commitments of China's NPFPC, UNFPA,
and Maria Stopes International, it's difficult to avoid the conclusion
that U.S. funds appropriated to fight HIV/AIDS are being used in China
to enforce its one-child policy through coercive abortion.
The Gerard Health Foundation report argues, "The American public
has reason to be seriously concerned about the Global Fund's camouflaged
activities and what is being done with taxpayer dollars."
According to the report, the best way for the Mexico City Policy to
be enforced in President Bush's HIV/AIDS program (PEPFAR) is for the
reauthorization of legislation to incorporate the language of the
Kemp-Kasten and Helms restrictions. Present authorization exempts
the Global Fund from the legal restrictions of these amendments.
The Kemp-Kasten Amendment, for example, prohibits giving U.S. "population
assistance" funds to "any organization or program which,
as determined by the President of the United States, supports or participates
in the management of a program of coercive abortion or involuntary
sterilization."
Another avenue would be to put NGOs like the Global Fund on notice
that they risk their funding by building partnerships with abortion
providers, like the UNFPA and Maria Stopes International, that are
in clear violation of the Mexico City Policy.
Money is fungible, the saying goes. Taxpayer money put in the top
of the pipeline to fight HIV/AIDS can come out the other end into
the pockets of organizations who think the best way to fight disease
is to eliminate the number of people who can get sick.
The Global Fund, like every other NGO receiving U.S. funds, needs
to be reminded that the American people don't want to pay for abortion,
especially at the cost of HIV/AIDS victims whose suffering could be
prevented.


