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PAUL MARTIN PARTICIPATES IN UN LIE
In 1997 U.S. businessman, Ted Turner, former
husband of Hollywood actor, Jane Fonda, former Vice Chairman
of Time Warner Inc. and founder of CNN, gave an historic gift
of $1 billion to the UN. The donation was supposed to be used
to meet pressing global health, humanitarian and environmental
needs. In fact, Mr. Turner is an ardent supporter of population
control by way of abortion and birth control for third world
countries, and his donation has been directed mainly towards
population control.
To ensure that his donated monies be used
for this purpose, Mr. Turner had created the UN Foundation
to administer the funds. Its ten-member board consists of
long-time abortion and population control activists, such
as Dr. Nafis Sadik, former executive director of the UN Population
Fund (UNFPA), Dr. Gro Harlem Brundtland, former Director-General
of the World Health Organization (WHO) and Timothy Wirth,
a representative of U.S. Planned Parenthood, who served as
the head of the American delegation on behalf of former U.S.
President Bill Clinton in 1994 at the UN Conference on Population
Development in Cairo. All board members of the Foundation
are well known for their relentless pursuit of abortion and
birth control to reduce population growth in the third world.
On October 14, 2004, Mr. Turner's Foundation
placed a full-page advertisement in the International Herald
Tribune, a newspaper owned by the left-leaning New York Times.
The ad was published in conjunction with an
official statement issued the day before by the UN, in which
it committed itself "to an action plan to ensure universal
access to reproductive health information and services, uphold
fundamental human rights, including sexual and reproductive
rights, alleviate poverty, secure gender equality, and protect
the environment."
The advertisement itself stated that at the
UN International Conference on Population and Development
(ICPD) in 1994, the world's governments had committed
themselves to ensure universal access to "reproductive
health, information and services." The expression "reproductive
health" is the UN code word for abortion on demand and
access to birth control available for everyone, especially
for adolescents, without parental knowledge or consent. The
ad further stated that "the largest generation of adolescents
in history - more than one billion people - are now entering
adulthood in a rapidly changing world." What the ad did
not say, however, was that only a fraction of these adolescents
live in North America and Europe where population is declining
at an alarming rate, and that the huge bulk of them live in
third world countries. Certainly, the ad implies that <u>something</u>
must be done to inhibit the fertility of adolescents in the
third world countries.
The ad included names of 52 global leaders
who affirmed the alleged ICPD statement, and who called upon
the international community to fund the ICPD's Plan of Action.
What is disturbing about this ad and the UN's
public commitment to "sexual and reproductive rights,"
is that it is based on a deliberate lie, promulgated by both
the western countries and the UN. Canada's Prime Minister,
Paul Martin, as one of the signatories to this advertisement
and the UN statement, should be held responsible for its falsehood.
Other Canadians signing the ad, by the way, were Louise Arbour,
former Supreme Court of Canada judge and now High Commissioner
for the UN Commission on Human Rights in Geneva, and UN gadfly,
Stephen Lewis.
UN officials had no authority to make an official
statement on sexual and reproductive rights, and the ad in
the International Herald Tribune deliberately provides false
information since the world governments did not commit themselves,
in 1994 at the ICPD, to "reproductive health."
This was the intention of the organizers of
that Conference, but it didn't happen. REAL Women attended
this Conference and, therefore, we have first hand knowledge
of the real story behind the ICPD.
Every effort was made to insure that the Conference
agreed to the imposition of abortion and birth control worldwide.
In March of that year, U.S. President Bill Clinton cabled
all U.S. embassies around the world requesting that they approach
local governments to encourage support for the Conference,
which was to make abortion an international human right.
The President of the Conference was Dr. Fred
Sai, a former President of International Planned Parenthood
(IPPF); the Secretary-General of the Conference, Dr. Nafis
Sadik, was President of the pro-abortion UN Population Fund
(UNFPA); another former President of IPPF and the head of
the U.S. delegation was Timothy Wirth, then a Board member
of Planned Parenthood of America (PPA). In addition to this,
225 members of IPPF were on 91 different government delegations
(including the Canadian delegation's Bonnie Johnson, President
of Planned Parenthood Federation of Canada). Moreover, 57
of the UN support staff sent from New York were open supporters
of IPPF and the feminist women's caucus.
In spite of all this pressure, the document
resulting from the Cairo Conference did not succeed in endorsing
the controversial issues, because of the pro-family NGOs present
at the Conference, which resulted in a lack of consensus at
the Conference. In fact, 24 countries placed reservations
against all the controversial provisions, and four Islamic
countries boycotted the Conference altogether because of its
controversial objectives.
Importantly, any provisions relating to sexual
and reproductive rights were made subject to the provision
that they were to be carried out only in accordance with each
nation's laws, religious and ethical values. That is,
there was no obligation on any nation to honour these controversial
provisions if they contravened its laws and cultural and religious
values.
Moreover, the phrase so hated by population
controllers, inserted in a previous UN population document
at Mexico City in 1984, that "abortion should not be
used as a method of family planning" was not deleted
from the document. The organizers of the Conference were not
pleased.
The crucial definition and containment of
reproductive health (abortion) and birth control, agreed to
at the conference, has consistently been ignored by the UN
and the western countries. For example, at the follow-up to
the Cairo Conference (Cairo + 5), held in New York in March
1999, at which REAL Women was also present, the restrictions
or caveat (called a "chapeau" in UN language) were
never referred to and not even footnoted. As far as the wheelers
and dealers of the western powers and the UN officials were
concerned, this chapeau didn't exist. Yet this chapeau or
caveat in the ICPD document was the only reason why the provision
for "reproductive health" (abortion) was agreed
to at Cairo. The third world countries honestly believed at
that time that this reservation would be respected and honoured
by the other nations. Little did they realize the duplicity
of the west and UN officials.
The UN statement and Mr. Turner's advertisement
in the International Herald Tribune were just another attempt
to misrepresent what actually occurred at the ICPD, and to
impose abortion and birth control worldwide. Mr. Martin should
be ashamed of himself for participating in this attempt to
fraudulently impose this on unwilling nations.
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