The 48th UN Commission on Population and Development (CPD)
ended on Friday April 18th with a firm rejection of the anti life and family
policies the UN is attempting to impose globally.
The 48th session of the
Commission, was themed, ‘Integrating population issues into sustainable
development, including in the post-2015 development agenda’. This was the last
Commission before the upcoming negotiations on a new 15 year programme to be known
as the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG’s) and was regarded by UNFPA the UN
population fund and their anti life allies, such as International Planned
Parenthood (IPPF), as their best opportunity to influence the outcome of the
SDG’s by forcing the acceptance of controversial language on sexual and
reproductive rights and comprehensive sexuality education.
In recent years the negotiating strategy adopted by Western
governments has been to insert controversial issues into documents during the
negotiating period and rely on the chair to issue a compromise text which
inevitably retains some of those issues.
In this case negotiations on the outcome document over a
period of 10 days were similarly loaded up with controversial language and by
Thursday evening (April 16th) had become completely unacceptable. Negotiations continued on
Friday when a so called compromise text was produced by the chair Ms. Bénédicte
Frankinet from Belgium. The Chair had
removed a reference ‘sexual rights’ from the text but it still contained a
number of unacceptable references.
Ms. Frankinet made it clear that her so called compromise
text was final and demanded that the text be accepted without alteration as a
consensus document. The Nigerian Ambassador Usman Sarki speaking on behalf of
the African Group informed the meeting that the text needed further work and
that in his opinion agreement could be reached in 10-15 minutes given the
political will to do so. The chair was
unwilling to accommodate the concerns of the African countries regarding
terminology such as ‘comprehensive sexuality education’ (CSE) and reproductive
rights. Rather than qualify or delete the controversial terms the Chair
withdrew the document.
The decision by the chair to withdraw the document was
greeted with a shocked silence by the anti-life and family brigade, when the realisation sunk in that there would not
now be any outcome document and that there was no agreement on how to integrate
population policies in the post-2015 development agenda, the actual purpose of
this year’s commission.
Ambassador Sarki, who had diplomatically tried to persuade
the Chair to be more accommodating when he sought time to discuss proposed
changes spoke very forcibly following the withdrawal of the document. “We came to the meeting with an open mind,” he said, adding
that from the outset they had to deal with drafts “replete with controversial
issues that have in the past not only proved difficult to deal with but are
also extremely divisive in nature.” He put down a marker for future
negotiations saying that member state delegations and UN officials “should
refrain from putting language in drafts on which there is no consensus”. He also said that lack of an outcome document
should not be seen as a failure. “Member states”, he said, “have resisted the
imposition of unhelpful ideas and concepts on all the membership.”
Mr.Babatunde Osotimehin, head of the UN Population Fund
(UNFPA) told the meeting, in an obviously crestfallen manner, that he
“regretted” that an agreement could not be reached and then went on to
criticise countries for not being “tolerant,” because of their resistance to
the UNFPA agenda.
The delegate from Nauru, Rennier Gadabe, complained about
UNFPA harrassment of his Government during the negotiations “Does UNFPA he
said, think they can do this because Nauru is the smallest member state?” UNFPA
had pressured the Nauru Government to change its position on reproductive
rights and CSE and was critical of the position taken by the Nauru UN delegation.
The delegate angrily told the meeting that such tactics were “unacceptable.”
UNFPA has over the last few years spent hundreds of
thousands of dollars arranging conferences throughout the world, in places
like, Accra, Kuala Lumpur, Ocho Rios, Montevideo and other venues, with the
sole purpose of firstly influencing the outcome of this session of the
Commission and ultimately the Sustainable Development Goals.