by
Samantha Singson
June 20,
2008
LifeNews.com Note: Samantha Singson writes for the Catholic
Family and Human Rights Institute. This article originally appeared
in the pro-life group's Friday Fax publication.
New
York, NY (LifeNews.com/C-FAM) -- The United Nations Population
Fund (UNFPA) and other United Nations (UN) agencies and officials
over the last several months have been boasting of a new target
of universal access to reproductive health by 2015 under
the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) adopted with much fanfare
eight years ago.
Given that the MDGs were developed and passed by a meeting of heads
of state after months of negotiations, a new target would have to
have been passed by explicit agreement of the General Assembly.
UNFPA
claims that there is a new target based on a single sentence buried
in Annex II on page 73 of a 76 page Secretary General's Report (A/62/1)
which was adopted by the General Assembly last year.
More than 150 heads of state, the largest gathering of its sort in
history, negotiated the MDGs in 2000. Their agreement consisted of
eight broad, largely non-controversial goals such as eradicating poverty
and hunger, achieving universal primary education, and reducing child
mortality.
None
of the MDGs makes any mention of reproductive health and
neither does the Millennium Declaration upon which they are based.
The reason UNFPA and other groups are eager to adopt a new MDG on
"reproductive health" is that the term is then used to promote
abortion, even though the General Assembly has never agreed to such
a definition.
In the lead up to the five year review of the MDGs three years ago,
pro-abortion advocates, including the International Planned Parenthood
Federation and UNFPA, launched aggressive campaigns to get governments
to agree to a new goal on reproductive health. Their efforts
were defeated.
The 2005 meeting of national leaders decided against issuing new MDGs
and instead issued a political declaration that did endorse reproductive
health, but it is considered a non-binding, aspirational document
that has no force in international law.
Since those failed attempts to create a new and separate MDG on reproductive
health, abortion proponents have tried to attach reproductive
health to the existing MDGs.
The United States (US) consistently asserts that a target on reproductive
health has never been agreed to by member states.
At the board meeting of the United Nations Childrens Fund (UNICEF)
earlier this month, the US delegation took issue with the latest UNICEF
report which includes a reference to a reproductive health
target under the MDGs.
US Representative to UNICEF Bill Brisben stated that, while the US
is committed to achieving the core MDGs as agreed to in the Millennium
Declaration and reaffirmed in the 2005 Outcome Document of the World
Summit, the US does not support the addition of new goals, targets,
or indicators to the internationally-agreed Millennium Development
Goals."
He also said that neither we nor other UN Member States have
agreed to the creation by the UN Secretariat of a new MDG target on
reproductive health.
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