Untitled Document
The Terms of
Discussion-What's in a Word?
Thoraya Ahmed
Obaid, UNFPA Executive Director, speaking in Bangkok Dec. 16, 2002:
"The
language of the ICPD Programme of Action is extremely clear. There is no hidden
agenda, nor any secret codes." The programme says that "in no case
should abortion be promoted as a method of family planning." It says that
its goals are "to reduce the recourse to abortion through expanded and
improved family planning services. Prevention of unwanted pregnances must always
be given the highest priority and every attempt should be made to eliminate
the need for abortion." She added: "This paragraph means exactly what
it says, no more, no less."
Matters involving
women, marriage, sexuality and children are highly charged in every culture,
so some people expect us to use code words to talk about them. What do we really
mean when we use the following terms?
Adolescent reproductive health-education, counseling,
information and reproductive health services to protect young people from unwanted
pregnancy, HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted infections. While young people
should be advised that abstinence from sexual relations until marriage as the
safest course, the reality is that many will not heed this advice. Many young
women are given no choice. They need to know about more ways than abstinence
to protect themselves. [See Statement
by Thoraya Obaid, Executive Director, UNFPA, regarding the ICPD text: Information
"that helps them attain a level of maturity required to make responsible
decisions." "And while "recognizing the rights, duties and responsibilities
of parents and other persons legally responsible for adolescents to provide
appropriate
direction and guidance in sexual and reproductive matters," programmes
for adolescents should "not restrict the access of adolescents to appropriate
services and the information they need, including on sexually transmitted diseases
and sexual abuse."]
Cairo
goals-The Programme
of Action of the International Conference on Population and Development
(ICPD), held in 1994 in Cairo. In sum, they are to provide access for everyone
to reproductive health care, to ensure primary education for girls, to reduce
maternal mortality and morbidity and HIV/AIDS, and advance gender equality.
Consistent
condom use-This does not mean that men should wear a condom 24/7, only that
they should use one in every sexual encounter. The ICPD Programme of Action
recommends this as one way of reducing the risk of getting HIV/AIDS or other
sexually transmitted infections.
Family
planning-Information, counseling, contraceptives, services and materials-including
barrier, natural and other voluntary methods-that allow individuals to freely
and responsibly decide the number, timing and spacing of their children.
Gender
equality-Legal, social, political and economic equality between males and
females.
Human
rights-The concept of every person's right to the basic freedoms of speech,
religion, and assembly, and to freedom from fear and want, from violence, from
arbitrary detention, and from discrimination on the basis of race, sex or ethnicity.
ICPD
Programme of Action-A set of actions, investments and policies that 179
nations reached consensus on at the International Conference on Population and
Development (ICPD) in 1994 as necessary to achieve worldwide sustainable development.
[Read the full text here]
Reproductive
health-A state of physical well-being that involves protection from and
treatment for sexually transmitted infections, including HIV/AIDS; protection
from gender-based violence; education and counseling on sexual and reproductive
function; voluntary family planning; and safe motherhood.
Reproductive
health services-Education, counseling, information and materials necessary
to allow an individual to achieve reproductive health.
[Statement
by Thoraya Obaid, Executive Director, UNFPA: "Reproductive health services
is not code for promotion or support for 'abortion services.' Nothing in the
Cairo agenda or the Five-year Review [of that agenda] justifies that assertion.
Countries have the sovereign right to make laws on all aspects of reproductive
health."
Reproductive
rights-The basic right of all people to decide freely and responsibly the
number, spacing and timing of their children, and to have the information and
means to do so, and the right to attain the highest standard of sexual and reproductive
health. It is also the right of all to make decisions concerning reproduction
free of discrimination, coercion and violence, as expressed in human rights
documents.
Safe
motherhood-Health care, counseling, information and trained attendants during
pregnancy, labor and at birth that will allow a woman to bear children without
permanent damage to herself or to the child. Access to emergency obstetric care
could save one woman's life every minute.
Unsafe
abortion-Efforts to terminate a pregnancy made under unsanitary or illegal
conditions, or by an untrained, unqualified person, or both. More than 65,000
women die every year as a result of unsafe abortions.
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