by
Piero A. Tozzi
May 15,
2009
LifeNews.com
Note: Piero Tozzi writes for the Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute.
This article originally appeared in the pro-life group's Friday Fax
publication.
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Manila,
Philippines (LifeNews.com/CFAM) -- The head of the delegation
of the European Commission in the Philippines, Ambassador Alistair
MacDonald, has vocally intervened in a contentious legislative debate
in that nation, pushing legislators to pass a controversial "reproductive
health" bill while linking increased foreign aid to passage,
according to critics.
Speaking at a forum sponsored by the United Nations Population Fund
(UNFPA) to promote the Reproductive Health Care Act of 2008 in Manila
last week, MacDonald chided Filipino legislators for failing to pass
the bill, calling the "provision of effective and accessible"
reproductive health services "a responsibility of the State towards
the people of the Philippines."
Australia's Agency
for International Development and Agencia Española de Cooperación
Internacional, the international aid agency of Spain's socialist government,
also called for passage of the bill at the UNFPA forum.
According to news reports, MacDonald noted that 60 percent of European
Union (EU) aid is already channeled to reproductive health programs.
He hoped to link increased direct aid at the provincial level to increased
contraceptive usage, rewarding those provinces that most effectively
promoted contraception.
MacDonald denied that he was linking passage of the bill to funding,
stating that passage simply "would help secure that the health
care funds would be spend for the welfare of those who need the health
care the most."
MacDonalds intervention has rankled some Filipino critics, however,
who consider it an unwarranted intrusion in the legislative affairs
of a sovereign nation.
It calls to mind the actions of the European Commission ambassador
to Nicaragua, Francesa Mosca, who in 2006 joined UNFPA, other UN agencies
and several European donor nations in demanding that Nicaragua rescind
legislation strengthening protection of unborn life. Sweden reportedly
cut over $20 million in foreign aid to the Central American nation,
and Finland threatened to link continued aid to changes in Nicaraguas
abortion law.
Among other things, the Filipino reproductive health legislation would
promote sex education and contraceptives, including some which critics
say function as abortifacients.
Some UN committees and non-governmental organizations -- and, most
recently, new U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton -- have
included abortion within the term "reproductive health,"
though this has never been agreed to by the UN General Assembly.
Abortion
is illegal in the Philippines, and the Constitution protects the
life of the unborn from conception. MacDonald stopped short
of linking abortion with "reproductive health," claiming
instead that a lack of "an effective framework for reproductive
health" was a cause of "illegal abortion."
EU officials in the past have denied that it is EU policy to promote
abortion under the framework of "reproductive health."
A
senior staff member in the European Parliament reminded the Friday
Fax that in response to a direct question in 2003 from Dana Rosemary
Scallon, then an Irish Member of the European Parliament, as to whether
the "term 'reproductive health include[s] promotion of abortion,"
the EU Council responded "no," adding that "we do not
accept that abortion should form part of the policies on reproductive
and birth control education."
In order to enter into effect, the reproductive health bill would
need to pass both the House of Representatives and the Senate of the
Philippines and be then signed into law by President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.
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