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Blog - Amplify your voice

by: Nicole
Monday, January 11, 2010 at 11:41:00 AM EST

At long last, Secretary Clinton gave her much anticipated address to commemorate the 15th anniversary of the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD), which took place in Cairo, Egypt, back in 1994. Hosted on Friday afternoon, January 8th, by the State Department, this event has been in the making for some time. Originally scheduled for December, it was last rescheduled due to the biggest snow storm to hit Washington, DC, in over a decade. This time around, in the New Year, proponents of women’s and girls’ sexual and reproductive health and rights have finally had our day.
 
Secretary Clinton did not disappoint in her commitment to women’s and girls’ reproductive health and rights. She stated unequivocally that reproductive rights are at the heart of development, that we cannot achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) without them, and that ensuring these rights is key to development and political and economic stability and security around the world. Secretary Clinton also made it very clear that allowing women and girls around the world to be helpless to plan their families and to die and suffer from maternal mortality and morbidity is simply unacceptable. She also talked about how culture can prevent women from obtaining reproductive health services, from negotiating contraceptive use with their partners, and from realizing their potential. She underscored the need for gender equity, the involvement of men and boys, and just basic equity in societies.
 
All this said, it’s still hard for me to believe that we have to look back more than a decade to re-articulate a progressive agenda for the sexual and reproductive health and rights of women, men and young people around the world. So thank you Secretary Clinton for taking us back in order to take us forward from where we have been for the past eight years. Thank you for talking about the fact that a woman dies every minute of every day from complications due to pregnancy and childbirth. Thank you for reminding us that there are still 20 million unsafe abortions that take place every year. Thank you for talking about fistula and the sigma and devastating consequences that women, especially young women who are too young to give birth, must face when suffering from this preventable and treatable condition. Thank you for talking about gender-based violence and telling us that 70 million women and girls worldwide have been subjected to female genital cutting. And finally, thank you for talking about girls and young people.
 
There are 1.1 billion young people between the ages of 15-24 in the world today. They have the power to make change but not if our foreign assistance continues to fail to recognize them or prioritize their sexual and reproductive health needs. Fifteen years after ICPD, complications from pregnancy and childbirth remain the leading cause of death for young women ages 15 to 19 in low and middle income countries; less than 40 percent of young people have basic information about HIV; and each year at least two million young women in developing countries undergo unsafe abortion.
 
These dire realities for youth around the world are unacceptable and preventable. There is no excuse for denying young people the information, tools, and services that they need to live healthy lives and plan their families and futures. It’s time for U.S. Foreign Assistance to get real and support policies and programs that help young people make responsible decisions about their sexual and reproductive health.  This is their right, not ours to merely ponder or squander, but to respect and uphold.
 
Secretary Clinton’s speech today gives hope that the Administration is committed to instituting structural and organizational change to support women and girl’s reproductive rights. We as a community need to support her vision and the Cairo Program of Action. While Secretary Clinton acknowledged and described examples of real progress made towards the ICPD Program of Action in the past 15 years, she provided sobering reminders of how much farther we have to go and that we need to act quickly. The Administration and Congress must act now. Time is ticking towards the target year of 2015 for ICPD and the Millennium Development Goals. Time is ticking period.
 
Secretary Clinton thanked the audience for their efforts to advance women’s and girls’ reproductive health and rights throughout the good times and bad times. At the same time, she also asked us not to give up--not to become weary of the fight for what seems to be so evident, so obvious... She urged us to shoot for institutional and structural change that does not get wiped away with the winds of political change. This to me was the biggest call to action that she put forward. So now is the time, within the Global Health Initiative, within Foreign Assistance Reform, within the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, and within any other vehicles, to make programming for women and young people’s sexual and reproductive health and rights around the world a long-term and unquestionable component of U.S. foreign assistance.

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Comments
Thanks for your post I had not known that she had made this speech but now I definitely have to go look it up. I wish the news media would cover this instead of continuing talk about the Tiger Woods debacle or the latest celebrity stalkerfest!
# Posted By  vanessaaishacoleman | 1/12/10 06:52 PM | Report | Reply
Secretary Clinton is one of the most resPected woman on the world becuase of the fact that she always give words that could give relieving feelings with the aching heart of the majority. Regarding this thing, it is so true that we must give women and girls the right they needed. But it is also true that they have the right to decide for themselves but I think it would be better for them to be given proper guidance to set their goal straight for beneficial things. They can win responsibilities at their young age if they have the appropriate mindset. The Empire State Building was not designed as the building went up.  The same goes for businesses that are successful over the long term – business planning occurred at some point, and the strategic planning that went into it started with the overall goal, the short term goals, and all the ways to reach the constituent goals and the long term, and addressing strategies for revenue, finance, when or when not to get short term loans, the whole shebang.
# Posted By CortezC | 1/13/10 12:13 AM | Report | Reply
Its not fair that women are being denied rights to their body.Females should have just as much right to decicde what to do with their body as any other person.
# Posted By Panacakez | 1/13/10 10:46 AM | Report | Reply