Foreign Policy Blogs

Global Gag Rule

john_biesheuvalThe true costs of the Global Gag Rule may never be known. But it’s done with for now thanks to President Obama who reversed it in January. Two hundred and fifty health and human rights organizations from around the world sent him a signed letter of thanks.

Poor reproductive health is the leading cause of death among women in developing countries. Hundreds of thousands have died and many more have suffered.

In Kenya alone, it is estimated that 5000 women die every year from unsafe abortions. The Center for Reproductive Rights says one in seven women in Peru are hospitalized from back alley abortions.  This was in 2003.

Ever since President Bush reinstated the ideologically driven anti-abortion policy in January 2001, hundreds of non-governmental organizations who receive United States Agency for International Development (USAID) funding have had to shut down family planning operations or close altogether.

The policy also prohibited organizations who provided abortion related information or services  from obtaining female and male condoms, birth control pills, and intra-uterin devices.

USAID’s economic blackmail discriminated against poor women in developing countries. Blood is on their hands.  The gag rule has resulted in more deaths and more abortions.

The London-based International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF) says 36 million unplanned pregnancies and 15 million induced abortions occurred over the past eight years.

“It has undermined health systems and endangered the lives and health of the poorest and most vulnerable women on the planet by denying access to life saving family planning, sexual and reproductive health and HIV services and exposing them to the dangers of unsafe abortion.” – Dr Gill Greer of IPPF

 

Author

Nikolaj Nielsen

Nikolaj Nielsen has a Master's of Journalism and Media degree from a program partnership of three European universities - University of Arhus in Denmark, University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands, and Swansea University in Wales. His work has been published at Reuters AlertNet, openDemocracy.net, the New Internationalist and others.

Areas of Focus:
Torture; Women and Children; Asylum;

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