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* [http://www.unfpa.org/safemotherhood/ Safe Motherhood]
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Revision as of 20:57, 18 February 2009

United Nations Population Fund
Established1969
TypeSpecialised Agency
Legal statusActive
Websitewww.unfpa.org

The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) began operations in 1969 as the United Nations Fund for Population Activities (the name was changed in 1987) under the administration of the United Nations Development Fund.[1] In 1971 it was placed under the authority of the United Nations General Assembly.[2][3][4]

The UNFPA supports programs in four areas, the Arab States and Europe, Asia and the Pacific, Latin America and the Caribbean, and the sub-Saharan Africa. They work in more the 140 countries, territories and areas. Around three quarters of the staff work in the field.

Some of the UNFPA work involves the lead in providing supplies and services to protect reproductive health. They also encourage the participation of young people and women to help rebuild their societies who are affected by poor reproductive health which expands out into areas such as prevention of sexually transmitted diseases including HIV/Aids.

The UNFPA works in partnership with other United Nations agencies, governments and communities. Working together, the agency raises awareness and assembles the support and resources needed to attain the Millennium Development Goals.

Role of the UNFPA

The UNFPA stated mission is to promote the right of every woman, man and child to enjoy a life of health and equal opportunity. UNFPA supports countries in using population data for policies and programs to reduce poverty and to ensure that every pregnancy is wanted, every birth is safe, every young person is free of HIV/AIDS, and every girl and woman is treated with dignity and respect.

The agency’s main goals are:

Leadership

Executive Directors and Under-Secretary General of the UN
2000 - present Ms. Thoraya Ahmed Obaid (Kingdom of Saudi Arabia)
1987 - 2000 Dr. Nafis Sadik (Pakistan)
1969 - 1987 Mr. Rafael M. Salas (Philippines)

Areas of work

UNFPA is the world's largest international source of funding for population and reproductive health programs. The Fund works with governments and non-governmental organizations in over 140 countries with the support of the international community, supporting programs that help women, men and young people:

According to UNFPA these elements promote the right of "reproductive health", that is physical, mental, and social health in matters related to reproduction and the reproductive system.

The Fund raises awareness of these needs worldwide, advocates close attention to population problems, and helps needy countries formulate policies and strategies in support of sustainable development. Since 2001, it has been led by Thoraya Ahmed Obaid. The Fund is also represented by UNFPA Goodwill Ambassadors.

Program of Action

UNFPA's work is guided by the Program of Action adopted by 179 governments at the International Conference on Population and Development in 1994. The conference agreed that meeting people's needs for education and health, including reproductive health, is a prerequisite of sustainable development.

The main goals of the Program of Action are:

  • Universal access to reproductive health services by 2015
  • Universal primary education and closing the gender gap in education by 2015
  • Reducing maternal mortality by seventy-five percent by 2015
  • Reducing infant mortality
  • Increasing life expectancy

These goals were refined in 1999. One of the most important additions concerned HIV:

  • HIV infection rates in persons 15-24 years of age should be reduced by 25 percent in the most-affected countries by 2005 and by 25 percent globally by 2010.

Approach to health care

The Fund promotes a holistic approach to reproductive health care that includes access to a range of safe and affordable contraceptive methods and to sensitive counseling; prenatal care, attended deliveries, emergency obstetric care and post-natal care; and prevention of sexually transmitted infections by promoting safer sexual behavior.

UNFPA looks to improve the lives and expand the choices of individuals and couples because, according to UNFPA, in time the reproductive choices, multiplied across communities and countries, affect population construction and trends.

The work of the agency revolves around improving reproductive health, making motherhood safer, supporting adolescence and youth, preventing HIV/Aids, promoting gender equality, protecting human rights, and securing reproductive health supplies; throughout all this they use a culturally sensitive approach. Their major countries in need are third world countries who deal with these major problems.

Example projects

Campaign to End Fistula

  • This UNFPA-led global campaign works to prevent obstetric fistula, a devastating and socially isolating injury of childbirth, to treat women who live with the condition and help those who have been treated to return to their communities. The campaign works in more than 40 countries in Africa, the Arab States and South Asia.

Ending Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting

  • UNFPA has worked for many years to end the practice of female genital mutilation (sometimes called female circumcision), the partial or total removal of external female genital organs for cultural or other non-medical reasons. The practice, which affects 100-140 million women and girls across the world, violates their right to health and bodily integrity. In 2007, UNFPA in partnership with UNICEF, launched a $44-million program to reduce the practice by 40 per cent in 16 countries by 2015 and to end it within a generation. UNFPA also recently sponsored a Global Technical Consultation, which drew experts from all over the world to discuss strategies to convince communities to abandon the practice.

Y-PEER (Youth Peer Education Network)

  • This umbrella organization, which was piloted by UNFPA to address the AIDS epidemic among young people, supports hundreds of peer education projects in more than 20 countries in Eastern Europe, Africa and the Arab States. It seeks to bring common standards of excellence to a wide variety of peer-to-peer activities, by providing training, training manuals, an extensive website for sharing knowledge and experience, and many other resources.

Senegal

  • A successful UNFPA program which carried out three specific maternal mortality reduction projects that focused on the construction and renovation and equipping of health centers & rural maternity units.

Mali

  • Through interagency team work, the country was enabled to build and provide seven new community health centres in three areas plus one new maternity unit.

Chinese Population program

The UNFPA executive director stresses the need to broaden participation and overcome mistrust among partners.

Stephen Moore, of the Club for Growth, has leveled criticism on UNFPA, claiming the organization supports Chinese Population Control measures. Mr. Moore makes the claim that women in any trimester of pregnancy are strapped down, and their children aborted by the government, against their will, using UNFPA funds.[5]

A three-person U.S Congressional fact-finding team was subsequently sent on a two week tour throughout China. It allegedly wrote in a report to the State Department that it found "no evidence that UNFPA has supported or participated in the management of a program of coercive abortion or involuntary sterilization in China," as has been charged by critics [6], but President Bush blocked public release of the Report, so the exact contents are unknown. [7] The President followed the report by denying previously-approved $34 million in aid to the UNFPA, citing a 1985 law that allows him to ban funds to any international organization found by the administration to be in support of coerced abortion or sterilization.[8] Secretary of State Collin Powell delivered a letter to members of Congress in which it was stated that "regardless of the modest size" of the program in China "or any benefits its programs provide," the agency's "support of, and involvement in, China's population-planning activities allows the Chinese government to implement more effectively its program of coercive abortion."[8]

Similar teams sent by the British Parliament and the United Nations found the same result.[citation needed]

UNFPA and the United States Government

In 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, and 2006, the Bush Administration denied funding to UNFPA that had already been allocated by the U.S. Congress on the grounds that the UNFPA supported Chinese government programs which include forced abortions and sterilizations. In a letter from the Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs Nicholas Burns to Congress, the administration said it had determined that UNFPA’s support for China’s population program “facilitates (its) government’s coercive abortion program”, thus violating the Kemp-Kasten Amendment, which bans the use of United States aid to finance or support abortions overseas.[9]

This accusation has never been supported by any investigation, and has in fact been disproved by the various US, UK, and UN teams sent to examine UNFPA activities in China.[citation needed] UNFPA points out that it "does not provide support for abortion services".[10] Its charter includes a strong statement condemning coercion.".[11]

A 2001 study conducted by the pro-life Population Research Institute claims UNFPA cooperated with China's coercive abortion laws.[12]

The Bush Administration has continued to withhold funding, and has fought Congressional efforts to require an explanation of its decision to block the funds.

Nonprofit organizations have sprung up in an attempt to change this policy and to compensate by raising private donations:

In January of 2009 President Barack Obama restored U.S. funding to UNFPA by revoking the "Mexico City Policy". [13] [14]

UNFPA and the European Union

The European Union funds the UNFPA and under the Sandbaek report increased the funding in 2003, after the United States denied funding.

See also

References

  1. ^ "UNFPA in the United Nations System". United Nations Population Fund.
  2. ^ United Nations General Assembly Session -1 Resolution 2815. United Nations Fund for Population Activities A/RES/2815(XXVI) 14 December 1971. Retrieved 2008-07-11.
  3. ^ United Nations General Assembly Session -1 Resolution 3019. United Nations Fund for Population Activities A/RES/3019(XXVII) 18 December 1972. Retrieved 2008-07-11.
  4. ^ United Nations General Assembly Session 34 Resolution 104. United Nations Fund for Population Activities A/RES/34/104 14 December 1979. Retrieved 2008-07-11.
  5. ^ Editorial calling for de-funding, Stephen Moore, Cato Institute, May 15, 1999
  6. ^ Global Population Media Analysis, Communications Consortium Media Center, July 4-22, 2002
  7. ^ [http://www.unfpa.org/news/news.cfm?ID=146 Statement on U.S. Funding Decision by Thoraya Ahmed Obaid, Executive Director, UNFPA, July 22, 2002
  8. ^ a b U.S. Blocks Money for Family Clinics Promoted by U.N., NY Times, July 23, 2002
  9. ^ Background on withheld US funds, United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, 2007
  10. ^ UNFPA - Frequently Asked Questions
  11. ^ International Consensus Language from the ICPD Program of Action
  12. ^ http://www.pop.org/report/finalchinareport.pdf
  13. ^ http://www.unfpa.org/public/News/pid/1562
  14. ^ http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/MexicoCityPolicy-VoluntaryPopulationPlanning/

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