At the 1984 U.N. International Conference on Population in
The United Nations Declaration of the Rights of the Child (1959) calls for legal protection for children before birth as well as after birth In keeping with this obligation, the
Federal appellate courts have ruled that the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 provides the President the authority to “furnish assistance, on such terms and conditions as he may determine, for voluntary population planning.” Claims by pro-abortion organizations that the policy infringed upon their First Amendment rights have been rejected.[4]
As directed by the Policy, the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) requires potential recipients of
According to the IPPF, approximately 32 million visits a year are made to over 58,000 of its facilities worldwide.[5] These facilities are located in many countries that have laws prohibiting or severely limiting abortion. Undeterred, PPFA leadership is on record as having urged its international allies to break the laws of these nations, stating that “action outside the law, and even in violation of it, is part of the process of stimulating change.”[6]
On (insert date), the Obama Administration rescinded the Policy. As a result, abortion-on-demand will be actively promoted by groups like IPPF and practiced in other countries, underwritten by American taxpayer dollars. Further, pro-abortion family planning groups -- armed with federal funding – will continue to circumvent foreign abortion laws and pressure other nations to capitulate to their radical pro-abortion agenda.
By blocking federal funds from supporting abortion abroad, the Policy preserved comity of nations. By rescinding the Policy, the Obama Administration has ensured that millions of
Mexico is just one example[7] of a sovereign nation that has recently bowed to international pressure on abortion. A 2007 ruling by the Mexican Supreme Court – influenced by legal arguments made by American pro-abortion groups like the Center for Reproductive Rights and Planned Parenthood and opposed by the majority of the Mexican people – legalized abortion-on-demand during the first 12 weeks of pregnancy in Mexico City and the surrounding province.[8]
[1] White House Memorandum, dated 22 January 2001, available online at http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/20010123-5.html (last visited 8 January 2009).
[2] USAID statement in implementation of White House memorandum, supra, available at http://www.usaid.gov/bush_pro_new.html (last visited 8 January 2009).
[3] Statement of the
[4] DKT Memorial Fund Ltd. v. A.I.D., 281
[5] International Planned Parenthood Federation, “About Us”, available online at http://www.ippf.org/en/About/Default.htm (last visited: 12 January 2009).
[6] 1983 resolution signed by then-PPFA President Faye Wattleton.
[7] A complete list of nations pressured to legalize or increase access to abortion is available online at http://www.nrlc.org/federal/foreignaid/UNCommitteesAbortion.pdf (last visited: 15 January 2009).
[8] Ioana Ardelean, “An Ominous Sampling of International Efforts to Force Abortion on Reluctant Nations,” available online at http://aul.org/InternationalPressur (last visited: 15 January 2009); see also, Mailee Smith, “Mexico Supreme Court Decision a Major Threat to Latin America,” available online at http://blog.aul.org/2008/08/29/mexico-supreme-court-decision-a-major-threat-to-latin-america/ (last visited: 15 January 2009).