U.S. TELLS TEEN GIRLS
WORLDWIDE TO JUST SAY NO
INTERNATIONAL
By Barbara
Crossette - WEnews correspondent
(WOMENSENEWS)--The
Bush administration, which
has blocked payments to the
United Nations Population
Fund because of unfounded
reports that American money
was going to abortion in China,
opened a new front in its
opposition to international
family planning efforts this
month.
This time, in
meetings surrounding the United
Nations Special Session on
Children, the American delegation
tried to parlay its "abstinence-only"
sex education plan into international
policy.
The bid to give
prominence to a "just
say no" policy on adolescent
sex was defeated by a majority
of nations this time. Yet
women's health experts, inside
and outside the United Nations,
fear that the issue will sooner
or later resurface, and say
Washington's campaign can
only hurt girls in the poorest
nations.
Young Women
at Risk for Sexual Assault,
Trafficking and Pregnancy-Related
Deaths
In the developing
world, pregnant girls are
most often married, sometimes
at 10 or younger, or are the
victims of sexual coercion
and trafficking, said Adrienne
Germain, president of the
International Women's Health
Coalition, based in New York.
Promiscuous
behavior is not the issue.
Sex education is not a moral
question but often a matter
of life or death, especially
now that AIDS has begun to
affect girls and women in
sharply rising numbers in
Africa and Asia, outstripping
the spread of the disease
among men, experts said.
Moreover, pregnancy
is the leading cause of death
for young women ages 15 to
19 in poor countries, according
to UNICEF, the United Nations
Children's Fund. Many die
because they are physically
too young to be mothers. But
their societies give them
no choice.
"Abstinence-only
sex education is a very negative
position that the U.S. is
taking, which need not be
imposed on other countries,"
Germain said.
U.S. Leads
Abstinence-Only Campaign
Tommy Thompson,
the U.S. Secretary of Health
and Human Services who led
the United States delegation
at the Special Session on
Children from May 8 to May
10, is among Bush administration
officials who have emphasized
abstinence as a preventive
not only for unwanted pregnancies
but also for the spread of
sexually transmitted diseases.
In April, a House of Representatives
committee voted to continue
an abstinence-only sex education
program in the United States
at a cost of $50 million a
year. Broader sex education
programs cannot draw on those
funds.
Speaking at
a news conference during the
United Nations special assembly,
Anne Peterson, Assistant Administrator
of the U.S. Agency for International
Development's Bureau for Global
Health, said that the administration's
aim was to prevent many diseases
as well as teen-age pregnancies,
both internationally and on
the domestic front. She said
that there was clear evidence
that delaying the onset of
sexual activity was an integral
part of a successful health
program. She added that the
administration advocated raising
the age of marriage around
the world to avoid adverse
health consequences from early
births when abstinence was
not possible.
Opponents of
the Bush formula say that
the United States encourages
other nations and the Vatican
to advocate this policy in
international gatherings.
Among these
opponents are the International
Planned Parenthood Federation,
Catholics for a Free Choice
and Protestant church groups
that oppose the tenets of
the religious right.
Jennifer S.
Butler, Associate for Global
Issues for the Presbyterian
United Nations Office, says
that Algeria, Egypt, Iran,
Libya, Nicaragua, Pakistan
and Sudan are among those
counties working in concert
with the United States on
issues of sex education and
the reproductive health rights
of women.
Early Marriage
Common in Many Nations
Statistics from
a variety of United Nations
agencies and other international
organizations provide a picture
of adolescent motherhood in
the developing world. They
show that 82 million girls
between the ages of 10 and
17 living in developing countries
will be married before their
18th birthdays. Young women
ages 15 to 19 are twice as
likely to die in childbirth
than are women in their 20s
and those under 15 are five
times as likely not to survive
pregnancy.
More than 4.4
million adolescents in the
15- to 19-year-old age group
have abortions every year,
according to the United Nations
Population Fund. The agency
estimates that 40 percent
of them are unsafe and frequently
extremely crude operations.
Young women
are considered especially
at risk in sub-Saharan Africa
and South Asia. A report from
the Mahbub ul Haq Human Development
Center in Islamabad, Pakistan,
said that over 200,000 women
across South Asia--comprising
Bangladesh, Bhutan, India,
Maldives, Nepal and Sri Lanka
as well as Pakistan--die in
pregnancy and childbirth every
year.
"Norms
of early marriage continue
to predominate and a large
majority of girls become mothers
before the age of 20,"
said the report, "Human
Development in South Asia
2000: The Gender Question."
It found that, at least in
Pakistan, women did not have
enough knowledge or authority
in a family to demand contraceptives
until they reached their 30s.
Germain said
that young brides in parts
of Africa and Asia tend to
be married to men considerably
older and that these men have
often had multiple heterosexual
or homosexual experiences,
raising the risk of sexually
transmitted diseases including
AIDS. Because girls forced
into early marriages usually
cannot attend school and are
under family pressure to produce
children, they do not have
the opportunity or time to
learn about sexuality, contraception
and disease, she said.
"In Nigeria,
a girl often can't even get
prenatal care without her
husband's permission,"
said Germain, a former Ford
Foundation director in Bangladesh
who has helped to set up clinics
for women there. "Married
teen-age girls are the most
oppressed."
Barbara Crossette
is a former New York Times
correspondent in India and
the author of three books
on Asia.
For more
information:
United Nations
Population Fund: -
http://www.unfpa.org/
International
Women's Health Coalition:
- http://www.iwhc.org
UNICEF: - http://www.unicef.org