by
Susan Yoshihara, Ph.D.
August 15,
2008
Email
RSS
Feed
Printer
LifeNews.com Note: Susan Yoshihara, Ph.D. writes for the Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute. This article originally appeared in the pro-life group's Friday Fax publication.
Washington,
DC (LifeNews.com/CFAM) -- The Center for Reproductive Rights (CRR),
a prominent U.S.-based public interest group litigating and lobbying
for pro-abortion policies world-wide, has released its annual report
for 2007.
The reported CRR budget confirms that large US foundations continue
their heavy financial support for radical social policies not only
in the US, but all over the world.
The report shows that close to fifty percent of CRRs $14 million
budget is financed by more than forty American foundations.
The
Hewlett and Packard foundations lead the way. Other prominent donors
include Ford and MacArthur foundations as well as George Soros
Open Society Institute.
CRR is also supported financially by the UN Population Fund, which
claims to take a neutral position on abortion
The report highlights CRR campaigns in six foreign countries and the
US, campaigns which have focused predominantly on promoting the pro-abortion
interpretation of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), fighting against sexual abstinence
education programs, legalizing abortion, and promoting contraception.
The
report also lists CRRs involvement in legal challenges to overturn
pro-life laws in seventeen foreign countries.
The case studies included in the report illustrate the strategy CRR
uses in promoting its agenda. CRRs tactic is to present its
cases before UN treaty monitoring bodies to elicit pro-abortion treaty
interpretations from them.
Although non-binding, CRR then uses these interpretations in its friend-of-the-court briefs submitted to domestic courts, or in local public media campaigns. CRR also partners with local NGOs to help CRR in its efforts.
In 2007, this tactic was used in Brazil when CRR presented a case before the CEDAW committee accusing Brazil of not fulfilling its treaty obligations by supposedly not providing appropriate emergency obstetric care.
According to a CRR briefing at last years Women Deliver conference, CRRs strategy for the next several years will be trying to get a national court to rule that maternal health is a human right that already exists somewhere in international law and that legal abortion is required to fulfill that right.
They are testing this approach in a case they recently brought against Brazil.
In Europe, CRR brought a case against the Croatian government before the European Committee of Social Rights, which is a treaty body of the Council of Europe a regional human rights organization.
CRR claims that Croatias use of TeenStar an abstinence education program developed in the US promotes discrimination and spreads false information among teenagers.
CRR
also wrote two friend-of-the-court briefs to support a pro-abortion
challenge in Slovakian and Nicaraguan Supreme Courts. CRR succeeded
in defending abortion law in Slovakia, while other developments are
pending.
The report reveals that CRR has spent US foundations money abroad
to develop and test its controversial litigation techniques to then
try them at home. CRR is about to sponsor a Visiting Scholar and a
Future Scholar Fellowship programs to teach law school professors
and their students how to apply CRRs successful legal
advocacy strategies
in the U.S.
The
CRR report also announced its Federal Policy Agenda that
describes these strategies and how they can be applied in the American
legal context.
In 2007, CRR experts testified against the US before the UN treaty
body which monitors compliance with the Convention on the Elimination
of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (CERD).
CRR
elicited a ruling condemning the US for not guaranteeing equal access
to reproductive healthcare. CRR claims that these findings will
be an invaluable tool as we introduce our human rights approach into
our U.S. work.
Sign Up for Free Pro-Life News From LifeNews.com
|
Daily
Pro-Life News Report
|
Twice-Weekly
Pro-Life
News Report |
|
Receive
a free daily email report from LifeNews.com with the latest
pro-life news stories on abortion, euthanasia and stem cell
research. Sign up
here.
|
Receive
a free twice-weekly email report with the latest pro-life
news headlines on abortion, euthanasia and stem cell research.
Sign up here.
|




