Safe World for Women

Katerva Awards

About Rio+20

Rio-de-Janeiro

RIO+20 - A Gender Issue

Across the world, women are affected by environmental issues, which often lead to long lasting detrimental effects on their chances for independence and equality, as well as on their standard of living. As the result of floods, droughts, and other natural disasters, many women who rely on agriculture for income have been left in dire situations.
Read More

RIO+20 Statements from the Roots

AWARE Uganda - Statement on Women and Climate Change in Karamoja

The Impact of Climate Change on Women and Children in Karamoja - Statement by AWARE Uganda, Safeworld Field Partner.

BAFNET - Statement on Women and Climate Change in Central Uganda

The Impact of Climate Change on Women and Children in Central Uganda - Statement by BAFNET - Safeworld Field Partner.

BBF - Statement on Women and Climate Change in Nigeria

Climate Change: Challenges Facing Nigerian Women - Statement by Brown Button Foundation - Safeworld Field Partner.

EACO - Statement on Women and Climate Change in Mukono, Uganda

The Impact of Climate Change on Women and Children in Mukono, Uganda - Statement by EACO - Safeworld Field Partner.

Hope Centre - Statement on Women, Children and Climate Change in Wakiso, Uganda

The Impact of Climate Change on Women and Children in Wakiso, Uganda - Statement by Hope Children's Centre - Safeworld Field Partner.

New Life - Statement on Women and Climate Change in Southern India

The Impact of Climate Change on Women and Children in Southern India - Statement by New Life - Safeworld Field Partner.

SDTS - Statement on Women and Climate Change in Sindh Province, Pakistan

The Impact of Climate Change on Women and Children in Sindh Province, Pakistan - Statement by SDTS - Safeworld Field Partner.

USA: Women Well-Poised to Act on Climate Change

USA - Women can act on climate change

Only 40 % of Americans are concerned or alarmed by global warming. However research shows that women may be more eco-conscious than men.
Results of a recent survey said that that women feel guiltier than men about not practicing an eco-friendly lifestyle.
Read More

Delegates-atRio20-summitDelegates at the Rio+20 summit. | Photo: Secom Bahia, Fotos Gov/Ba

Rio+20: Planned Parenthood Foundation Condemns Disregard for Reproductive Rights

Source: Tewodros Melesse | Think Africa

There were few unanimous voices emerging from the Rio+20 summit on “Sustainable Development”.

Sadly, one of those unanimous voices was that of the Reproductive Rights community, united in its disappointment and outright anger that once again reproductive rights had been sidelined and alluded to in only the most cursory fashion in the outcome document.

The International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF), the world’s largest sexual and reproductive health and rights NGO, has long maintained (in common with other groups) that the capacity for women to make free and open choices about whether, when, and how often to have children is absolutely central to any consideration of sustainability.

The issue of reproductive rights is one which Rio+20’s outcome document barely acknowledges. It offers some faint rays of hope: it re-affirms various existing agreements in the International Conference on Population and Development’s (ICPD) programme of action (PoA); its language with regard to reproductive health and women’s empowerment is generally positive; and with regard to the full and effective implementation of the ICPD PoAs, it includes “the promotion and protection of all human rights in this context”. 

The outcome document also states a generalised intent to address the needs of women by providing information on, and access to, sexual and reproductive health services, including safe, effective, affordable and effective methods of family planning.

But that’s about it.

Systematically sidelined

There’s no reference to reproductive rights. No recognition of women’s rights being at the centre of development. No recognition of the link between reproductive rights and sustainable development. No mainstreaming of reproductive health in relevant places such as education, cities, food and water. And gender is one of the very last sections to get a mention.

In short, reproductive rights have been firmly shunted off the sustainability agenda. This is due in no small part to the strenuous efforts of a tiny minority of implacable opponents, notably the Holy See, Malta and Egypt.

What did Rio+20 actually achieve? Despite glowing endorsements from world leaders, the consensus among many of the groups campaigning for serious change is “not a lot”. Rio+20 emerged with a process: a process designed to determine some goals, at some non-specific point in the future and with no discernible mechanism for their incorporation into other international undertakings, including the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

What the world achieved at Rio was the construction of a process to duck the issue, not to address it.  And Member States have done this without acknowledging that the active participation of their own citizens, and especially that of women, will drive sustainable development. This cannot be right.

Activism unscathed

No useful debate on sustainable development can afford to ignore reproductive rights. A woman’s right to protect herself from unwanted pregnancy – should she so wish – has immense health, social, educational and economic impacts, personally and globally. And yet, today, over 215 million women worldwide do not have that right. They do not have access to contraception. They are denied rights and choice.

The Declaration is a contradiction: it acknowledges existing ICPD and Beijing agreements, but offers no response. Its language is unanimous at the start, but descends into fruitless ambiguity. Collectively, Rio has concluded nothing which will help the world’s poorest and most vulnerable peoples. Rio has turned its back on the needs of half the world’s population. How can that be just? How can that be sustainable?

What will be sustained – and intensified – is the Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights community’s absolute determination to ensuring that world leaders and policy makers understand – finally – the true personal and political implications of the denial of reproductive rights.

On the outskirts of Rio there is a favela called Cachoeirinha, a slum which is home to 37,000 inhabitants. IPPF’s Member Association BEMFAM runs a project there, which works with young people to provide sex education. One 16-year-old had some advice for Rio delegates:

“Tell them to send their own daughters to live in our favela for one month, without any access to reproductive health as they suggest, then when they get pregnant the leaders will see for themselves what it is really like, and maybe they will change their minds”.

About the Author

An Ethiopian national, Mr Melesse studied economics at the Catholic University in Louvain, Belgium. He began his career in family planning and reproductive health in 1984 and worked at US-based reproductive health NGO Pathfinder International and IPPF before becoming Director of IPPF’s Africa Region. He assumed the position of Director-General on September 1 2011.

Add comment


Security code
Refresh