Guest Editorial - The Bush Administration Plays Politics with People's Lives
TWISTED POPULATION PRIORITY
It's hard to overstate the threat posed by global overpopulation. Many of the most serious problems facing the world and our region can be traced to it, from global warming to famine to traffic jams on the 405 freeway. yet one of the most effective programs for combating it is under siege by the Bush administration.
In a triumph of ideological obsession over rationality, antiabortion advocates, who often oppose any form of family planning, are zeroing in on the United nations Population Fund (UNFPA). The Fund does not support or promote abortions, though its foes desperately try to link it to them.
The Bush administration cut off all U.S. contributions (which added up to $34 million) to the Fund in 2002 and, a year later, defunded Marie Stopes international, a British charity focusing on AIDS programs, because it cooperated with the Fund. This year, for the first time in 30 years, the U.S. government failed to participate in the Global Health Conference because it included speakers from UNFPA.
Now the Bush administration is engaging in a new round of election-year pandering by threatening to terminate financing for UNICEF and the World Health Organization unless they stop cooperating with UNFPA.
The administration suspended support for UNFPA (and other women's health programs) under the provisions of the 1984 Kemp-Kasten bill, which authorizes withholding of funds if an agency "supports or participates" in coercive abortion or involuntary sterilization. In President Bush's contorted logic, a few computers and automobiles provided to the Chinese government by the UNFPA constituted support for the country's coercive abortion programs.
Bush ignored the fact that, according to his administration's State Department investigative team's 2002 report on the UNFPA and China, "no evidence" links the UN program to any coercive programs. Similarly, a British investigative team concluded that the UNFPA was "a force for good" in China.
Though the Chinese government's "one child" policies are reprehensible, the UNFPA has actually served to dramatically reduce female sterilization, abortion and infant mortality rates there. Further, although family planning opponents have used the UNFPA's activities in China as an excuse to cut off all U.S. funding, the population fund has had similar successes in 140 other countries where it distributes contraceptives and educational materials on HIV/AIDS.
As Secretary of State Colin Powell observed in 2001, the UNFPA is performing a valuable service. The Bush administration is not only giving the United States a fresh international black eye by attacking the United Nations and other programs that work on population issues, it is, perversely, encouraging the spread of squalor, misery and death in the Third World.
Source: editorial page, Los Angeles Times, June 24, 2004.
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