Statement on behalf of Ipas
to the United Nations Commission on
Population and Development
April 3, 2002
Barbara B. Crane, Ph.D., Executive Vice President
Mr. Chairman, distinguished delegates, colleagues in the NGO
community, and friends:
It is a privilege to speak to you this afternoon. My name is Barbara Crane. I represent Ipas, an international
nongovernmental organization working globally to protect women’s health and
advance their reproductive rights.
We welcome the comprehensive and informative overview of these
issues provided by the Secretary General in this year’s report on world population
monitoring.
I want to focus this afternoon on one of the most critical concerns
raised in the report, the continuing worldwide toll from the complications of
unsafe abortion. In the nearly eight
years since the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD)
in 1994, millions of women have suffered trauma and injuries due to abortions
performed unsafely. WHO estimates that over
half a million women have died. If we do
not succeed in reducing these deaths and injuries, we will not be able to
achieve the reductions in maternal mortality called for in the ICPD Programme
of Action and more recently in the Millenium Development Goals. We know that in fact we could succeed. With concerted action, the deaths and
injuries from unsafe abortion are entirely preventable.
Fortunately, the international community is responding. At ICPD in 1994, the consensus was that where
abortion is legal, it should be safe.
In 2000, at the Special Session of the General Assembly for ICPD+5, governments
agreed that “in circumstances where abortion is not against the law, health
systems should train and equip health-service providers and should take other
measures to ensure that such abortion is safe and accessible.” Significantly, all but four countries in
the world allow abortion under some circumstances.
Yet, even in countries where abortion is legal for various
indications, the reality is that services are often not available or affordable. And they are not safe. Women who are in vulnerable positions –
including poor women, adolescents, and refugees -- have the least access to contraception
or to safe abortion care. In answer to
this need, bilateral and multilateral donors, private foundations, governments,
and international and national nongovernmental organizations, including Ipas, are
mobilizing resources and forming new partnerships to take action.
The resources available are still minimal relative to the
scale of the need. Ironically, while
abortion often dominates international debates on reproductive health, both, postabortion
treatment of complications and elective abortion care are among the most
neglected components of reproductive health policies, training, expenditures, or
service delivery.
Much of the programmatic effort to date has focused on
postabortion care, and the progress achieved since ICPD is indeed heartening. A recent multi-country study found that more
than 40 countries have undertaken programs to improve postabortion care. Last month, delegations from 15 countries of
the Francophone Africa region met in Senegal to discuss how to strengthen
programs in this area. Two years ago,
representatives from 21 countries from around the world met in Kenya to develop
action plans for postabortion care. But
in the words of one African health official at that meeting, “Postabortion care
services are as if we are mopping the floor and the tap is broken. We say we don’t want to fix the tap, but we
keep mopping and mopping and asking for more mops.”
To “fix the tap,” that is, to prevent unsafe abortion and
its consequences, the ICPD Program of Action, together with the General
Assembly ICPD+5 recommendations and the Beijing Platform for Action, provide
strong guidance on the actions required.
Everyone has a role to play.
- We can
work together to ensure at the outset that women and men are empowered,
informed, and capable of healthy, loving, respectful, and responsible sexual
relationships.
- We can
give women access in their communities to effective methods of
contraception, including emergency contraception.
- We can
help women understand how to recognize the signs of pregnancy as well as where
to seek pregnancy testing, and, as appropriate, counseling on their
options.
- We can
train providers -- doctors, midwives, or other midlevel professionals --
in clinical procedures and counseling; ensure that they understand
applicable laws, norms, and protocols; and prepare them to treat women with
compassion and respect.
- We can
ensure that facilities are equipped and put referral systems in place to
assure that women have access in their communities to the full range of reproductive
health care they need.
- Most basic
of all, we can create awareness of this problem, promote a constructive dialogue
around the solutions, and reform policies and laws, particularly those that
are punitive toward women or their health care providers.
The Secretary-General’s report, in highlighting HIV/AIDS,
drew attention to the wider reproductive health care needs of sexually active HIV-positive
women. We must ensure that these needs are
being addressed, including information and services to prevent unwanted
pregnancy and, if an HIV-positive woman is pregnant, to enable her to make a
free and informed choice about her pregnancy.
While I have been speaking to you in the last few minutes,
some 200 desperate women – daughters, sisters, wives, and mothers -- have
decided to put themselves in the hands of a clandestine or unsafe
provider. What would they say to us if
they could be here now? What are the
hopes and dreams they would share for themselves, for their children, for their
families, and for their communities? How
can we turn our backs on them? What
choices do we offer them? While debate
in the international media, universities, and in this forum here is open and
free, what avenues do these women have to make their voices heard? Too often, they and the NGOs or providers
who speak for them are effectively gagged by donor policies or by other forms
of cultural and institutional intimidation.
Mr. Chairman, we believe it is the responsibility of the UN
Commission on Population and Development to provide leadership and inspire
action on behalf of all of the recommendations of the ICPD Program of
Action. The UNCPD can promote
accountability and strong monitoring, ensuring that adequate resources are
devoted to measuring the prevalence of unsafe abortion, assessing its
consequences for maternal mortality and morbidity, and tracking health systems’
responses.
In the words of Mahmoud Fathalla, one of the most respected
global health leaders of our time, “Women are not dying because of diseases we
cannot treat. They are dying because
societies have yet to make the decision that their lives are worth
saving.” Let us find the political
will. Let us make the decisions to save
women’s lives – the lives of our daughters, sisters, wives, and mothers -- and let
us work closely together in this most noble endeavour.