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Women
Claim a Victory at U.N. Summit Development:
Delegates
manage to get the finalized document reopened to add words on rights and
reproductive health.
THE LA TIMES
- By KENNETH R. WEISS, TIMES STAFF WRITER
September
4 2002
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa -- The issue of women's rights and reproductive
health caused delegates at a U.N. development summit here to stumble briefly
Tuesday in their mad dash to wrap up a global plan to reduce poverty and
simultaneously protect the planet.
Final negotiations on the plan were completed Monday. However, delegates
from Canada and Europe succeeded early today to reopen the document and
add a few words that they said were needed to guarantee women's rights
to contraception, safe abortion and other reproductive services.
"We won. We won," said June Zeitlin, executive director of the
nonprofit Women's Environment and Development Organization. "Never
underestimate the women of the world."
Zeitlin and U.N. officials said language added to the health-care paragraph
of the plan matches wording used in other international declarations on
the topic. Their efforts had been opposed by a coalition that includes
the United States, the Vatican and conservative Islamic countries.
After hours of intense negotiations, Zeitlin said, delegates "added
the language that we've been asking for and put it in a slightly different
place in the paragraph," she said. "It's a distinction without
a difference, but it saved face."
The 10-day World Summit on Sustainable Development is scheduled to end
today. The more than 100 assembled heads of state or government are first
expected to adopt the plan, which is designed to bring clean water, sanitation
and energy to the poor while protecting the environment and preventing
further extinction of species.
Secretary of State Colin L. Powell--standing in for President Bush, who
opted not to attend--arrived at the conference late Tuesday and will address
the gathering today. His speech will follow two days of on-again, off-again
Bush bashing at the summit, mostly over the issue of global warming.
Other world leaders continued to express their disappointment that the
U.S. abandoned the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, an international treaty designed
to control "greenhouse" gas emissions, which are being blamed
for rapid climate changes.
Russian Prime Minister Mikhail M. Kasyanov on Tuesday used the world stage
here to announce that his nation would soon ratify the protocol, following
by one day an announcement by Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien, who
said he would submit the treaty to his Parliament this year for approval.
If these two nations join Japan and the European Union, their collective
support surpasses the threshold needed for the accord to take effect without
the blessing of the United States, which opposes some of the protocol's
restrictions.
Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Christine Todd Whitman said
that she was pleased to see other nations step forward to support the
protocol but that the Bush administration still intends to pursue, on
its own, ways to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuel. "We've
never acted as obstructionists for other countries," she said.
The issue of women's reproductive rights triggered protests both inside
and outside the convention center. "Women's rights are human rights,"
Nkosazana Zuma, South Africa's foreign minister, said Tuesday. "Health
is a human right."
Advocates for women complained that the plan, at more than 70 pages, retreated
from standard language that has been carefully crafted in other United
Nations declarations to balance the interests of religious conservatives
with the rights of women to control their health care and future.
Usually such texts explain that health services provided should be consistent
with "cultural and religious values," which pleases conservatives,
but also conform with "human rights and fundamental freedoms,"
which satisfies women's groups.
Zonibel Woods of Action Canada for Population and Development said the
document, as drafted in committees and agreed upon Monday, lacked the
second half of the language.
Without such an expression of human rights, some countries could hide
behind their laws and local customs to justify everything from genital
excision to denying women health care, she and U.N. officials said.
Under Taliban rule in Afghanistan, she said, "women couldn't go to
the hospital, because women were not allowed to be doctors and women patients
were not allowed to be examined by male doctors. President Bush, in responding
to the anti-choice, pro-life lobby, is promoting behavior that the Taliban
would have found completely acceptable."
The Bush administration had said it opposed changing the language of the
plan for procedural reasons and because debate over the issue would have
distracted delegates from the other major issues they faced.
The U.N. Population Fund, which recently had $34 million in funding blocked
by the Bush administration, notes that 70,000 women die every year from
unsafe abortions, and 585,000 perish during pregnancy and childbirth due
to inadequate health care.
"Rights to reproductive health care is a matter of life and death
for women throughout the world," said William A. Ryan of the U.N.
agency.
Delegates also continued to negotiate early today over the language of
a political declaration that will be released at the end of the summit.
With that process bogged down in the slow and often messy democratic process,
former Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev and several other Nobel Peace
Prize winners issued their own "Johannesburg declaration." The
statement urged the world leaders to take swift action to help the poor
and protect the environment.
Gorbachev, who is president of the environmental group Green Cross International,
urged that the meeting of so many leaders not be squandered. "If
we fail to act decisively and strongly, we will be judged harshly by future
generations," he said. "We should win the battle for the planet."
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