LawmakersTo Strengthen Reproductive Health, Rights
New York, Oct 28 2009 5:10PM
Parliamentarians from some 115 countries pledged to promote sexual and reproductive health as well as women’s rights to decide how and when they give birth, at a United Nations-backed gathering which wrapped up today.
The two-day
gathering in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, saw hundreds of
legislators and ministers support the principles and goals
of the landmark International Conference on Population and
Development (ICPD) held in Cairo in 1994, when 179
governments explicitly recognized sexual and reproductive
health as a human right.
“We are here to ensure that
greater progress is made to advance human rights, including
the right to sexual and reproductive health, and to hold
governments accountable,” UN Population Fund (UNFPA)
Executive Director Thoraya Ahmed Obaid said yesterday at the
fourth global parliamentarians’ conference on population
and development.
UN estimates in 2005 showed that,
every minute, a woman dies of complications related to
pregnancy and childbirth, adding up to more than 500,000
women dying annually, and almost all in developing
countries.
“Participants unanimously adopted the
Addis Ababa Statement of Commitment, in which they pledged
to exercise their oversight responsibilities to break the
silence around gender discrimination and to promote sexual
and reproductive health and reproductive rights,” UNFPA
said in a news release.
The delegates said that
although some progress has been made in achieving universal
access to reproductive health and a sharp reduction in
maternal deaths by 2015, advances have been slow in many
countries.
In addition, the urgency to act has been
heightened by conflicts, foreign occupation and emerging
issues, including climate change, demographic challenges,
environmental degradation, and the food and financial
crises.
Around 400 parliamentarians attending the
conference committed to supporting accessible and affordable
health services that promote family planning, HIV prevention
and the health and well-being of women and girls.
The
participants also pledged to increase funding to at least 10
per cent of national budgets and development assistance
budgets for population assistance, and to review laws and
practices that still restrict access to sexual and
reproductive health.
The Addis Ababa gathering
followed three similar global conferences in Bangkok in
2006, Strasbourg in 2004 and Ottawa in
2002.
ENDS