[Vision2020] Can this actually be "pro-life"?
nickgier at roadrunner.com
nickgier at roadrunner.com
Thu Oct 9 23:27:39 PDT 2008
October 9, 2008
The New York Times
Can This Be Pro-Life?
By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF
The Bush administration this month is quietly cutting off birth control supplies
to some of the world’s poorest women in Africa.
Thus the paradox of a “pro-life” administration adopting a policy whose result
will be tens of thousands of additional abortions each year — along with more
women dying in childbirth.
The saga also spotlights a clear difference between Barack Obama and John
McCain. Senator Obama supports U.N.-led efforts to promote family planning;
Senator McCain stands with President Bush in opposing certain crucial efforts to
help women reduce unwanted pregnancies in Africa and Asia.
There is something about reproductive health — maybe the sex part — that makes
some Americans froth and go crazy. We see it in the opposition to condoms to
curb AIDS in Africa and in the insistence on abstinence-only sex education in
American classrooms (one reason American teenage pregnancy rates are more than
double those in Canada). And we see it in the decision of some towns — like
Wasilla, Alaska, when Sarah Palin was mayor there — to bill rape victims for the
kits used to gather evidence of sex crimes. In most places, police departments
pay for rape kits, which cost hundreds of dollars, but while Ms. Palin was mayor
of Wasilla, the town decided to save money by billing rape victims.
The latest bout of reproductive-health madness came in the last couple of weeks
when the U.S. Agency for International Development ordered six African countries
to ensure that no U.S.-financed condoms, birth control pills, I.U.D.’s or other
contraceptives are furnished to Marie Stopes International, a British-based aid
group that operates clinics in poor countries.
The Bush administration says it took this action because Marie Stopes
International works with the U.N. Population Fund in China. President Bush has
cut all financing for the population fund on the — false — basis that it
supports China’s family-planning program.
It’s true that China’s one-child policy sometimes includes forced abortion, and
when traveling in rural China, I still come across peasants whose homes have
been knocked down as punishment for an unauthorized child. But the U.N. fund has
been the most powerful force in moderating China’s policy, and a State
Department team itself found no evidence of any U.N. involvement in the
coercion.
Mr. Bush’s defunding of the U.N. Population Fund — backed by Senator McCain —
has persisted since 2002. What is new is the extension of that policy to a
leading private family-planning organization like Marie Stopes International.
“The irony and hypocrisy of it is that this is a bone to the self-described
‘pro-life’ movement, but it will result in deaths to women who just want to
space their births,” said Dana Hovig, the chief executive of Marie Stopes
International. The organization estimates that the result will be at least
157,000 additional unwanted pregnancies per year, leading to 62,000 additional
abortions and 660 women dying in childbirth.
That may overstate the impact. Kent Hill, an official of the U.S. aid agency,
insists that there will be no increase in pregnancies because the American
contraceptives will simply be routed to other aid groups in Africa.
That will work to some degree in big cities. But it’s a fantasy in rural Africa.
Over the years, I’ve dropped in on a half-dozen Marie Stopes clinics, and in
rural areas there’s typically nothing else for many miles around. Women in the
villages simply have no other source of family planning.
“This nearsighted maneuver will have direct and dire consequences,” a group of
prominent public health experts in America declared in an open letter, adding
that the action “will translate almost immediately into increased maternal death
and disability.”
Proponents of the cut-off are not misogynists. They are honestly outraged by
forced abortions in China. But why take it out on the most impoverished and
voiceless people on earth? Mr. McCain seems to have supported Mr. Bush, mostly
out of instinct, and when a reporter asked him this spring whether American aid
should finance contraceptives to fight AIDS in Africa, he initially said, “I
haven’t thought about it,” and later added, “You’ve stumped me.”
Retrograde decisions on reproductive health are reached in conference rooms in
Washington, but I’ve seen how they play out in African villages. A young woman
lies in a hut, bleeding to death or swollen by infection, as untrained midwives
offer her water or herbs. Her husband and children wait anxiously outside the
hut, their faces frozen and perspiring as her groans weaken.
When she dies, her body is bundled in an old blanket and buried in a shallow
hole, with brush piled on top to keep wild animals away. Her children sob and
shriek and in the ensuing months they often endure neglect and are far more
likely to die of hunger or disease.
In some parts of Africa, a woman now has a 1-in-10 risk of dying in childbirth.
The idea that U.S. policy may increase that toll is infuriating.
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