Published by the International
Institute for Sustainable Development
(IISD) Vol. 06 No. 46 Monday,
15 February 1999
THE HAGUE FORUM
8-12 FEBRUARY 1999
The International Forum for the Operational Review and
Appraisal
of the Implementation of the Programme of Action (POA) of the
International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD)
took place from 8-12 February 1999 in The Hague. The Hague Forum
is an integral part of the five-year review of the
implementation of the ICPD POA (ICPD+5), which will culminate in
a Special Session of the UN General Assembly from 30 June-2 July
1999. The Forum, organized by the UN Population Fund (UNFPA) and
hosted by the Dutch Government, was attended by approximately
2000 participants, including ministers and other high-level
government officials, parliamentarians, representatives of UN
specialized agencies, international and non-governmental
organizations (NGOs), youth, and the media.
The goals of the Hague Forum were to: examine lessons learned,
success stories, obstacles and constraints to enable further
implementation of the POA; allow for exchange among countries
facing similar experiences; bring together a wide variety of
partners to refocus commitment on population and development;
and provide technical inputs to the Special Session. The Forum
assessed country-level operational and programme experience in
POA implementation, focusing on five substantive themes:
creating an enabling environment for the further
implementation of the POA;
gender equality, equity and empowerment of women;
reproductive health, including family planning and sexual
health and reproductive rights;
strengthening partnerships; and
resource flows and financing for POA implementation.
As a starting point for discussions, the Forum used a
background
paper prepared by UNFPA entitled A Five-Year Review of Progress
towards the Implementation of the ICPD POA, which identifies
further action required in the five thematic areas and
synthesizes findings from roundtable and technical meetings,
conclusions from consultations organized by the UN Regional
Commissions, responses to a global field inquiry conducted by
UNFPA in mid-1998, and progress reports on ICPD implementation
by UN specialized agencies.
During the course of the week-long Forum, delegates met in
parallel Plenary and Main Committee sessions. Statements from
134 ministers and other high-level government representatives,
and 45 UN bodies, NGOs, youth and intergovernmental
organizations were delivered in Plenary sessions during the
first four days on the operational review and assessment of POA
implementation at the country level. The Main Committee met
during the first four days to consider the five substantive
themes. US First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton delivered the
keynote address of the Forum.
The outcome of the Forum was a draft report that summarizes the
findings and proposed actions of the Main Committees
deliberations. The report will be submitted to the Commission on
Population and Development (CPD) and will provide input into the
upcoming Secretary-Generals Report, which will be the basis for
negotiation at the Preparatory Committee (PrepCom) for the
Special Session in March.
The Hague Forum was not about renegotiating the POA, although
some may have anticipated or even hoped for this. Rather it
contemplated country experiences to date, brought into focus
some emerging and new concerns and, above all, underscored the
length of the road ahead.
A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE ICPD+5 PROCESS
The ICPD was held in Cairo, Egypt, from 5-13 September 1994. An
estimated 20,000 government delegates, UN representatives, NGOs
and media representatives attended the conference, which adopted
a 16-chapter POA on population and development. The POA, adopted
by 179 countries, underscores the integral and mutually
reinforcing linkages between population and development and
endorses a new rights-based strategy focused on meeting the
needs of individual women and men rather than on achieving
demographic targets. One of the primary goals of the POA is to
make family planning universally available by 2015 as part of a
broadened approach to reproductive health (RH) and rights. It
includes other time-bound population and development goals for
1995-2015, including the reduction of infant, child and maternal
mortality and provision of universal access to education,
especially for girls. The POA addresses issues relating to:
population, the environment and consumption patterns; the
family; internal and international migration; prevention and
control of HIV/AIDS; technology, research and development; and
partnership with the non-governmental sector. The POA provides
estimates of the levels of national resources and international
assistance required and calls on governments to make those
resources available.
In Resolution 52/188 of 18 December 1997, the UN
General Assembly decided to convene a Special Session from 30
June-2 July 1999 to review and appraise implementation of the
ICPD POA. The General Assembly emphasized that existing
agreements contained in the POA would not be renegotiated. The
General Assembly designated the CPD as the preparatory body for
the Special Session and the 32nd session of the CPD in March
1999 as the Preparatory Committee (PrepCom). The Population
Division of the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs
(UNDESA)and UNFPA are collaborating and coordinating the ICPD
review process leading up to the Special Session.
In preparation for The Hague Forum, UNFPA organized six
roundtable and technical meetings in 1998 to provide input into
ICPD+5, focusing on technical and operational assessments of
progress made and constraints faced by countries in implementing
the POA. The meetings addressed:
Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health (14-17 April,
New
York);
Reproductive Rights and Implementation of Reproductive
Health Programmes, Womens Empowerment, Male Involvement and
Human Rights (22-25 June, Kampala, Uganda);
Partnership with Civil Society in POA Implementation (27-
30
July, Dhaka, Bangladesh);
International Migration and Development (29 June-3 July,
The Hague);
Population and Ageing (6-9 October, Brussels); and
Reproductive Health Services in Crisis Situations (3-5
November, Rennes, France).
Five-year regional reviews on population and development were
also conducted by the UN Regional Commissions to contribute to
the ICPD+5 process.
REPORT OF THE HAGUE FORUM
UNFPA Executive Director Nafis Sadik opened The Hague Forum on
Monday morning, 8 February 1999, by announcing the election of
Amb. Nicolaas Biegman (the Netherlands) as President of the
Forum.
A number of speakers then took the floor to deliver
introductory
remarks, including: Wim J. Deetman, Mayor of The Hague; Els
Borst-Eilers, Deputy Prime Minister of the Netherlands; UN
Deputy Secretary-General Louise Frechette; Nana Rawlings, First
Lady of Ghana; Elizabeth Aguirre de Calderon Sol, First Lady of
El Salvador; Eveline Herfkens, Dutch Minister for Development
Cooperation; and Baron Vaea, Prime Minister of Tonga, on behalf
of small Pacific Island States.
UNFPA Executive Director Nafis Sadik highlighted the commitment
and work of the Dutch Government, NGOs and youth as an example
for donor countries. She recalled efforts to achieve consensus
in Cairo and the progress made since then, stating that the
Forum would serve to appraise experiences, lessons and
obstacles. She introduced the background document prepared by
UNFPA, emphasizing that it was intended as a starting point for
discussion and was not a draft to be renegotiated. She drew
attention to the problems facing young people, such as teenage
pregnancy and the increase in sexually transmitted diseases
(STDs), including HIV/AIDS. Noting that all economic progress is
built on a social foundation, she emphasized the need to summon
the necessary commitment and resources to move from prescription
to action and highlighted the importance of partnerships.
Forum President Biegman introduced the rules of procedure,
provisional agenda and programme of work, which were adopted by
the Plenary. Delegates elected to the Forums Bureau were: Aicha
Belarbi (Morocco), El-Hadj Ibrahima Sall (Senegal), Gerald
Sendaula (Uganda), Kiyotaka Akasaka (Japan), Datin Paduka hajah
Zaleha binti Ismail (Malaysia), Elsa Berquo (Brazil), Rudolph
Collins (Guyana), Rudolfo Tuiran (Mexico), Teodor Chernev
(Bulgaria), Jerzy Holzer (Poland), Zoreslava Shkiryav-Nyzhnyk
(Ukraine), Rosa-Anna Weiss (Austria) and Margaret Pollack (US).
Anwarul Karim Chowdhury (Bangladesh) was elected as Chair of the
Main Committee and Jyoti Singh (India) was designated as
Secretary and ex-officio Bureau member. Elsa Berquo (Brazil) was
later designated as the Forums Rapporteur. President Biegman
noted that the Bureau would act as the drafting committee for
the final document to emerge from the Forum.
Representatives from the Parliamentarians, Youth and NGO
Forums, held in The Hague in the days preceding the Forum, then
presented reports of their deliberations.
The International Parliamentarians Forum resolved to further
promote RH and rights and advance womens empowerment. They
noted advances in areas including laws to ban violence against
women but highlighted continuing challenges. They called on
governments to increase the flow of ODA to reach the 0.7% target
and devote 4.5-5% to population issues.
The NGO Forum highlighted the need to: achieve consensus on
policy formulation that includes NGOs as partners; establish
permanent mechanisms for POA implementation; mobilize additional
financial resources for sexual and reproductive health (SRH)
initiatives; ensure that health sector reform includes RH;
mobilize funds for women and youth activities; and prevent the
spread of HIV/AIDS.
The Youth Forum highlighted the central role that youth play in
development of policies and programmes for POA implementation.
The Forum formulated recommendations on access to education,
informed choice and access to RH, elimination of violence
against youth and children and HIV/AIDS prevention for youth.
They also called for: inclusion of RH and rights, family life
education, safe motherhood and gender equity and equality in
school curricula; a new UN agency for youth; effective
incorporation of youth issues into development programmes;
development of national education programmes designed for and by
youth; and governmental promotion of youth entrepreneurship.
PANEL ON FOLLOW-UP TO THE ICPD POA
Following the opening Plenary, heads of UN organizations
participated in a panel on follow-up to the POA. WHO Director-
General Gro Harlem Brundtland noted that since Cairo, more open
debate has occurred on previously taboo topics related to SRH.
She stressed that failure to address RH needs is a matter of
human rights and social justice. She noted that global resources
for public health interventions have not kept up with increasing
demand. Looking ahead, she highlighted maternal health and
adolescent SRH as issues demanding particular attention. She
expressed the WHOs commitment to putting health at the center
of the development agenda.
UNICEF Executive Director Carol Bellamy underscored that
adolescents should enjoy the rights of access to education,
health and other services, and said parents and teachers must be
active in adolescents education. She stressed the need for
investment in girls education, expanded approaches to safe
motherhood and womens RH, and political will.
UNAIDS Executive Director Peter Piot stated that the AIDS
epidemic has worsened since Cairo, particularly for youth. He
said AIDS is undermining hard-won gains in development, although
some countries have succeeded in reversing the trend with
education campaigns. He emphasized the need for political
commitment, greater investment and technological breakthroughs.
UNFPA Executive Director Nafis Sadik said the global
conferences
of the 1990s demonstrated that social investment is fundamental
to progress. She highlighted the need for a new development
paradigm where macroeconomic policies look at micro-level needs
and stressed the need to incorporate communication with economic
leaders into advocacy for population issues. She called for: a
more integrated approach to RH; involvement and education of
men; improved data and knowledge; and maximization of resources
to the social sector.
KEYNOTE ADDRESS
US First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton delivered the keynote
address of the Forum on Tuesday. She recalled that the world had
agreed in Cairo that choice, not coercion or control, creates
smaller families and slower population growth, and that respect
for womens rights must be part of efforts to improve the
quality of life. She reaffirmed the US Governments commitment
to implementing the ICPD goals and announced President Clintons
proposal to commit US$25 million as a voluntary contribution to
UNFPA next year. She stressed the need to make abortion safe,
legal and rare, and to reduce teenage pregnancy. She said
womens childbearing decisions should be made freely and
responsibly without government coercion. She underscored the
need to invest in human resources and give equal access to RH
services to all women. She called for sustained commitment from
all partners, especially from youth, who will bear the
responsibility in the next century.
PLENARY
In Plenary sessions from Monday evening to Thursday evening,
179
delegates from 134 governments, 12 UN agencies, 23 NGOs, seven
international organizations and three youth organizations
delivered statements on the operational review and assessment at
the country level of the POA. Several statements highlighted the
need for a multi-sectoral approach to population issues, noted
financial constraints that have hampered developing country
capacity to implement the POA, and called on donor countries and
organizations to increase their level of support. Delegates
addressed the importance of: RH services; awareness creation
among adolescents; womens empowerment; STDs, including the
HIV/AIDS epidemic; migration; partnerships; resource constraints
caused by debt servicing and economic crises; and creation of
enabling environments through application of holistic
approaches, appropriate policies and legislative frameworks. A
number of speakers noted adoption and implementation of national
population policies and establishment of population commissions
as well as safe motherhood programmes. Legal reforms to protect
womens rights, eradicate violence against women and children
and outlaw female genital mutilation were also highlighted.
Several representatives observed a marked increase in the number
of women in decision-making positions. They stressed that the
ability to effectively implement the POA depends on overcoming
social, political and cultural barriers, enhancing human and
institutional capacities and making resources available.
Representatives of international organizations highlighted
their
activities in cooperation with governments, local communities
and civil societies and reiterated their commitment to the ICPD
goals. Civil society representatives stressed: elimination of
legislative barriers; eradication of corruption; transparency;
improvement of maternal health care; development of proper
curricula in education; effective involvement of youth, NGOs,
women and other groups in decision-making; and prioritization in
the provision of education and health services.
MAIN COMMITTEE
CREATING AN ENABLING ENVIRONMENT FOR FURTHER IMPLEMENTATION OF
THE POA: The Main Committee considered this substantive theme on
Monday afternoon. Joseph Chamie, Director of the Population
Division of UNDESA, introduced the issue.
Discussions highlighted the need for institutional capacity-
building, enhancement of partnerships, data and indicators for
monitoring progress, strategies to increase awareness, and
consideration of the impacts of structural adjustment programmes
(SAPs) on the creation of enabling environments for POA
implementation. Several delegates stressed community
mobilization, creation of partnerships, prioritization of high-
risk groups and consideration of population in the wider context
of global problems. They emphasized the need for tools to
integrate population into planning and for partnerships that
bring direct benefits to the poor. Governments were urged to
create or strengthen structures that coordinate civil society
collaboration and facilitate early private sector inclusion in
POA implementation. A number of participants supported
strengthening and consolidating viable institutions, clearly
articulating training policies and improving support mechanisms
to address women and poverty. They emphasized private sector
participation, SRH and access to education and employment.
Regarding SAPs, some delegates noted that they undermined
institutional capacity and hindered POA implementation. Debt
servicing and unsustainable resource use were highlighted as
weakening governments ability to address poverty. Several
delegates called for debt cancellation for the poorest countries
and stressed the need for clear rules on capital flows and a
sound macroeconomic environment as preconditions for POA
implementation. IMF involvement in design and planning of new
programmes and in the population and development dialogue was
proposed. Given the increasing flows of migrants and the impacts
of migration, delegates called for increased attention to
economic and social transformation, as well as factors
underlying involuntary migration. The need for social indicators
that cover a diversity of socio-cultural norms to monitor
progress on POA implementation was raised.
GENDER EQUALITY, EQUITY AND EMPOWERMENT OF WOMEN: The Main
Committee addressed this theme on Tuesday morning. Maria Isabel
Plata, Executive Director of PROFAMILIA, introduced the topic. A
number of speakers emphasized the importance of incorporating a
gender perspective into the development of policies. Delegates
emphasized the need for: policies and actions aimed at
empowering women and girls; indicators to monitor progress in
gender mainstreaming; and gender-disaggregated data. The
importance of changing negative attitudes and stereotypes
towards women was emphasized.
Several speakers stressed the need to eliminate discrimination
and violence against women. CANADA said eradicating violence
against women is central to achieving equality and requires
integrated, holistic and multi-disciplinary approaches, legal,
social and economic reforms and involvement of institutions,
NGOs and civil society. FRANCE emphasized the need to ensure
that increasing privatization does not cause poor women to be
excluded from health care. A number of delegates called for
increased attention to the needs of aged women. Delegates also
emphasized: constant attention to mainstreaming of gender
concerns; consultation with women in programme design; agenda
prioritization of gender equity; training of special staff on
gender perspectives; changes to customs and traditions that
prohibit women from exercising their rights; legislative reforms
to deter sexual abuse of girls; steps to raise womens awareness
of their rights; an increase in female literacy; and closure of
the gender gap in education. The need to increase the number of
women in decision-making positions, particularly at the highest
political levels was highlighted. UNIFEM supported capacity-
building in policy-making bodies and the need for gender
mainstreaming in all areas, not just in those with gender
implications. Several delegates stressed the need for a human
rights-based approach to POA implementation and the importance
of drawing on other commitments, such as the Beijing Platform of
Action, to strengthen ICPD implementation. Numerous
interventions underscored the protection of the girl child.
GREECE advocated prioritization of education, vocational
training and sexual education for girls. Reducing sex
trafficking and FGM and increasing male responsibility and
partnership were also emphasized.
REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH, INCLUDING FAMILY PLANNING AND SEXUAL
HEALTH, AND REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS: The Main Committee considered
this substantive theme on Tuesday afternoon and Wednesday
morning. Dr. Mahmoud Fathalla, Rockefeller Foundation Senior
Advisor, and Dr. Raj Adul Karim, Director-General of the
National Population and Family Development Board, introduced the
key issues.
Several delegates emphasized the need for integration of RH
into
primary health services, universal access to RH and
comprehensive services. Delegates stressed the importance of
improving legal frameworks to protect the rights of women and
girls and ensure equal access to RH and health care. The CENTER
FOR REPRODUCTIVE LAW AND POLICY said the rights to RH care and
reproductive self-determination are fundamental and enshrine
human rights protected under international law.
The need for international assistance to developing countries
to
improve quality of RH services was underscored. Several
delegates proposed training of health workers in counseling and
reproductive rights and emphasized protection of privacy,
informed and free consent and confidentiality. Delegates
stressed womens right to free and informed choice from all
available and safe contraceptive methods. They proposed
development of standards for quality and costs of services and
indicators to monitor access. Several speakers advocated
extending networks of RH services to under-supplied groups,
including poor people, those in rural areas, people with
disabilities, men and older women. GERMANY stressed the role of
the private sector in ensuring wider coverage by distributing
subsidized contraceptives through social marketing programmes.
The YOUTH FORUM called for allocation of 20% of public health
spending to programmes geared toward adolescents including
comprehensive sex education in schools. A number of speakers
supported including sex education in school curricula and
efforts to ensure access to RH services appropriate to young
peoples needs.
On unsafe abortion, several speakers reaffirmed POA paragraph
8.25, which states that abortion should be safe where it is
legal and calls for access to treatment of complications from
abortion. The International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF)
suggested that ICPD+5 endorse the Beijing recommendation urging
review of laws containing punitive measures against women to
accelerate implementation of paragraph 8.25. Delegates called
for renewed commitment to minimizing maternal mortality and
morbidity from unsafe abortion and expressed concern about the
lack of quality emergency obstetric care. The UK proposed
developing intermediate milestones for 2005, 2010 and 2015 for
maternal mortality.
MEXICO said abortion is a public health problem that should be
reduced by improving quality of family planning services and
counseling. She proposed providing information on emergency
contraception, which is intended to prevent induced abortion.
ARGENTINA rejected the inclusion of abortion within RH, stating
that voluntary interruption of pregnancy or abortion is an
attack on the right to life of the unborn. The INTERNATIONAL
RIGHT TO LIFE FEDERATION said legalizing abortion in developing
countries would increase rather than decrease maternal
mortality. The HOLY SEE proposed reaffirming that in no case
should abortion be promoted as a family planning method. He said
emergency contraception cannot be considered an application of
family planning nor the exercise of an alleged reproductive
right.
On HIV/AIDS, delegates highlighted the need for greater
emphasis
on prevention and treatment, counseling for those infected,
awareness campaigns, and further research. UNAIDS stressed the
need to integrate prevention into general health programmes. The
UK recommended establishing a global goal and intermediate
targets for HIV/AIDS reduction. FRANCE endorsed the adoption of
an HIV/AIDS indicator. GHANA called for affordable access to
testing and life-prolonging drugs in developing countries.
Several delegates supported HIV prevention in school curricula
and AIDS programmes that promote condom use and responsible
sexual behavior, with special emphasis on male involvement. The
need for provision of RH services to refugee women, including
emergency contraceptives, was underscored by numerous delegates.
STRENGTHENING PARTNERSHIPS: Participants addressed this
substantive theme on Wednesday afternoon. Florence Manguyu of
the Medical Womens International Association introduced the
topic.
Discussion highlighted advances in cooperation and
collaboration
between governments, civil society and the international
community, although delegates felt there was still considerable
scope to develop partnerships further. A number of delegates
talked about creating an enabling environment for collaborative
policy formulation and programme implementation and monitoring.
Closer and more formalized links were advocated at local,
national and international levels.
Regarding partnerships between civil society and governments,
the need for transparency, accountability and inclusiveness was
articulated. Participants also emphasized the importance of
NGOs, stressing the need to build human resource and
institutional capacities. Closer relations between NGOs and
international organizations were advocated. The importance of
developing private sector involvement in POA implementation was
stressed by several delegates. They emphasized the involvement
of religious and womens groups and highlighted the unique role
of parliamentarians. Delegates underscored the need for closer
collaboration among the various UN agencies and organizations
and partnership between intergovernmental groups. A number of
delegates reflected on the need for closer cooperation with
youth.
RESOURCE FLOWS AND FINANCING FOR FURTHER IMPLEMENTATION OF THE
POA: Delegates addressed this substantive theme on Thursday
morning. Dr. Steve Sinding, Director of Population Science at
the Rockefeller Foundation, introduced the topic. Many delegates
underscored the need for more funding and resources from donor
countries in order to meet ICPD goals. CYPRUS said donors have a
moral obligation to increase assistance, as agreed in Cairo.
Many speakers stressed the need for political will.
The NETHERLANDS identified the possible need to update the
Cairo
cost projection for POA implementation and highlighted the need
to observe priorities, the 0.7% of ODA target and, with others,
the 20/20 Initiative. DENMARK stressed an integrated approach
rather than a vertical numbers game approach. BELGIUM urged
donors to earmark funds for basic services. On behalf of youth
participants, the NGO DUTCH COUNCIL ON YOUTH AND POPULATION
called for funding from donors for SRH projects to be
conditional on allocation of at least 20% to initiatives for
adolescents.
The need for efficient and effective use of resources was
emphasized. Several speakers highlighted the need to develop
innovative financial mechanisms, such as a tax on financial
transactions, and to improve coordination between agencies.
Several delegates underscored the benefits of South-South
cooperation and called for its support. A number of delegates
supported domestic mobilization of resources. UGANDA called for
government accountability and innovative means to mobilize local
private sector funds. The GAMBIA emphasized improvement of
enabling environments to encourage fulfillment of commitments.
JAMAICA supported debt forgiveness for implementing the 20/20
Initiative and debt for programme swaps. A number of
participants recommended tracking and monitoring resource flows.
It was suggested that financial institutions make their mandates
more flexible and simplify their procedures for support.
Another constraint mentioned was the lack of resources for
NGOs.
Participants underscored the increasingly important role of the
private sector. PERU emphasized private sector mobilization for
RH and family planning at international and local levels.
Concerning resources for the broader ICPD goals, NORWAY said the
Cairo agenda must not be viewed in isolation from the other
global conferences of the 1990s, noting that poverty, the right
to development and social investment apply to all these agendas
and that the percentage of funding to the population sector is
less important than that channeled to development.
CLOSING PLENARY
Eveline Herfkens, Netherlands Minister for Development
Cooperation, observed that a central message came through at the
Forum: ICPD works. She said it has succeeded in giving people
more choices, especially women. She highlighted an increased
awareness of the need for information and services, especially
for youth, and welcomed their involvement in the Forum.
Stressing the importance of resources, she called on donors to
put your money where your mouth is. She also called for
establishment of national priorities, noting that investment in
health, including RH, is a condition for economic growth and
stressing the need to get priorities right, implement
legislation and dedicate resources.
Main Committee Chair Chowdury introduced the draft report of
the
Forum, as contained in FPA/HAGUE/FC/1, explaining that it was
referred to as a draft report because it would undergo minor
editing by the UNFPA Secretariat prior to its submission to the
CPD. The report would be taken into account, along with UNFPAs
background document on the five-year review and appraisal of
ICPD implementation and the reports of the regional reviews, in
the preparation of the Secretary-Generals Report, which will
serve as the basis for negotiation at the PrepCom. Chowdury
introduced the findings and proposed actions contained in the
draft report, explaining that he had summarized the central
points of the Main Committee deliberations on the five
substantive themes and submitted these to the Bureau, which
acted as the drafting committee.
President Biegman explained that the Bureau engaged in soft
drafting of the report, which was not a negotiated text and
therefore did not bind delegations, but would provide important
input to the negotiations in New York. The Plenary then adopted
the draft report and the floor was opened for closing remarks.
IRAN voiced its support for providing information and educating
youth on human rights and SRH, but stressed that cultural and
religious values should be observed. He said he did not support
including sexual education at all levels, as called for in the
draft report. GERMANY, on behalf of the EU, stated that while
the draft report was not a negotiated document, it provided a
useful summary of the issues. She expressed hope that the
Secretary-Generals Report would be as concise and action-
oriented as possible. GUATEMALA, ARGENTINA, EL SALVADOR and
SYRIA said the report did not fully reflect their views, was not
a negotiated paper and was therefore not binding. ARGENTINA
stressed the need to adapt the reports language with that
adopted in Cairo, and said the term sexual rights, which is
not Cairo language, should not be included. President Biegman
said the term would be removed and replaced with Beijing
language that addresses the same issue.
The US stated that while financial commitments lag behind
political commitments, the Cairo approach has moved from
commitment to action. She welcomed the high level of
participation by young people and NGOs and progress made in the
review effort. Highlighting a need for the draft report to
include the religious dimension as a principle, MOROCCO warned
against redrafting Cairo language without a mandate. SUDAN
called for consideration of different ages and abilities as well
as differing national values and norms when educating
adolescents on RH. COLOMBIA stressed strengthening links with
NGOs, including womens and human rights groups, and supported
investment for social justice programmes.
On the proposed actions for adolescents RH, MOROCCO cautioned
against the inclusion of contradictory language and stressed the
role of parental guidance in educating and shaping adolescents
attitudes. The NGO AND YOUTH FORA called for their involvement
in global policy-making and looked forward to participating in
the continuing dialogue in New York.
In her closing statement, UNFPA Executive Director Nafis Sadik
stated that the Forum had succeeded in engaging participants in
an exchange of ideas on POA implementation, resulting in a
common understanding of the ICPD goals. She said the most
important achievement had been to demonstrate that the POA is
more than a piece of paper by highlighting the progress made in
its implementation. She referred to ICPD as a watershed that
changed approaches to population and development. She stated
that POA implementation strengthens the human rights framework,
improves lives and saves womens lives, protects the family and
offers choices beyond the family, liberates the mind, energizes
the spirit and is based on ethical and moral principles. She
said the Forum resulted in a better understanding of the concept
of a rights-based approach. It also placed adolescent RH and
rights issues, including those of people in emergency
situations, as well as gender-based violence, on the public
agenda. She underscored that several challenges and obstacles
remain and reiterated the call for sustained commitment and
political will to overcome these in a productive way. She
stressed the need to identify new ways to cooperate with the
private sector, lauded donor countries that have proposed
increasing contributions to UNFPA, and thanked the private
foundations that have committed resources to population and
health activities. She paid tribute to the parliamentarians,
NGOs and youth that participated in the Forum and called on
religious leaders to participate in further dialogues. She
thanked participants for their efforts and expressed hope that
they would continue to work with reinforced determination and be
inspired to fight the battle of everyday with renewed
commitment and partnership.
In his closing statement, Forum President Biegman said the
Cairo
consensus has taken root and the approach based on the rights of
the individual is being applied worldwide. He said delegates
know what must be done and how to do it, which explained the
absence of controversy at the Forum. He noted that population
and RH have to compete for funding with many other sectors and
stressed that the lack of resources currently poses the major
constraint to POA implementation. He expressed hope that the
Forum, apart from taking stock and reaffirming commitment, had
helped to generate the interest and attention of decision-makers
outside the population community. He stated that youth have a
direct interest in ICPD issues and play an important role in
implementation, and said he valued their active and sizeable
participation in the Forum. He called on delegates to go out
into the world and spread the word, and drew the Forum to a
close at 5:30 pm.
DRAFT REPORT OF THE FORUM
The draft report of The Hague Forum contains four introductory
chapters that provide background, list countries and
organizations that attended, note the election of the Bureau
members and other procedural matters, and describe the
functioning of the Forum (the number and subject matter of
Plenary and Main Committee sessions). The fifth chapter provides
background, outlines progress to date, identifies issues and
constraints and recommends proposed actions for each of the five
substantive themes. It is preceded by an introduction. This
substantive part of the draft report is summarized below.
INTRODUCTION
The introduction notes that the purpose of the Forum was to
conduct an operational review of POA implementation. It
highlights considerable progress in policy and programme design,
increased partnership and collaboration toward implementation.
The review of progress on the scope of collaborative efforts
with civil society provides a basis for optimism, as do the
devolution of public responsibilities, decentralization of
public administrations and other institutional changes. However,
since 1994 the world has faced a series of adverse occurrences
with impacts on POA implementation, including financial crises,
natural disasters, a steep drop in prices of oil and other
commodities, social instability, and civil and subregional
conflicts.
Global population has doubled since 1960 and 97% of future
population growth will occur in developing countries. As people
have been given greater choice of contraception, population
growth rates have continued to decline but the population
continues to grow by 77 million people a year. There are over
one billion young people between 15-24, the largest cohort ever,
and their SRH needs are not yet being adequately addressed. The
number and proportion of older persons is increasing due to
recent mortality and fertility reductions, yet policies to
provide the services they need are lacking. Mortality decline
has been uneven, with declines in life expectancy in countries
with economies in transition due to social stress, poor
nutrition and deteriorating health services, and in countries
most affected by HIV/AIDS, such as sub-Saharan Africa. Maternal
mortality also requires attention and action.
As the demand for smaller families has increased and access to
safe and accessible contraception has improved, fertility levels
have declined. Nevertheless, over 150 million couples still have
an unmet need. Recourse to abortion has declined dramatically in
countries where contraceptive access and acceptance have
increased, but it remains a serious problem. International
migration and its social impacts have increased in importance,
prompting governments to undertake action, such as assistance to
refugee women and children, promotion of integration of migrants
and sanctions to combat illegal migration. The challenge is to
understand the root causes of migration.
The introduction also underscores that the contexts for
implementation of population and development programmes vary,
and the POA recognizes the need to consider the economic,
social, cultural and environmental diversity of different
countries and peoples shared but differentiated
responsibilities to forge a better common future.
It notes that The Hague Forum reaffirmed the POA in critical
areas. A human rights-based approach has received growing
acceptance and has served to enhance the quality and
accessibility of RH services. The international human rights
treaty bodies, national human rights offices and NGOs have
increasingly taken note of RH in recommendations and decisions.
Policy changes in many countries demonstrate a commitment to
move from vertical family planning programmes to a comprehensive
SRH approach emphasizing quality of care. The ICPD and the
subsequent Fourth World Conference on Women enhanced national
attention to the centrality of gender equity, equality and
womens empowerment in sustainable development, and governments
have made strides to implement conventions such as CEDAW and
enact gender action plans and legislation on gender-based
violence.
There has been an increase in the number and variety of
partnerships over the past five years, particularly in which
NGOs share responsibility with government institutions for POA
implementation. National coordination mechanisms have been
established, with increasing recognition of the importance of
transparency and good governance. Where communities have been
involved, dramatic progress has been made in furthering
implementation. There has been increasing involvement by
parliamentarian groups and a growing recognition of the need for
full involvement of youth.
CREATING AN ENABLING ENVIRONMENT FOR FURTHER IMPLEMENTATION OF
THE POA
The draft report provides background on the thematic area of
creating an enabling environment for further implementation of
the POA. Good governance, transparency, accountability and the
promotion of democracy are listed as essential to achieving
sustainable development. It stresses the need to recognize and
address interrelationships between population, resources,
environment and development and to bring patterns of production
and consumption into balance.
PROGRESS TO DATE: The report notes: strong political
commitment;
efforts to articulate and/or implement broad-based population
policies grounded in human rights work; enactment or reform of
legislation protecting the human rights of women and outlawing
gender-based violence, including harmful traditional practices;
and the increasing recognition of civil society groups as
effective entities for further POA implementation.
The draft report identifies global economic trends,
environmental degradation, national conflicts and crises,
migration, resource limitations and changes in population
structure as constraints. Global economic trends with adverse
effects on the pace of POA implementation include unrestricted
flows of capital and SAPs, falling GDP, rapid inflation, and
burdensome debt service. The need to respond to economic crises
distracts governments from addressing environmental concerns.
Unbalanced production and consumption patterns, unregulated
movement of toxic materials, inadequate integration of
population issues into environmental policy and planning and
insufficient analysis of environment, population and poverty
linkages are highlighted. Natural disasters, instability and
armed conflict result in a breakdown of governance, inadequate
infrastructure and competing priorities. Internal and
international migration and the vulnerability of displaced
persons to exploitation and human rights abuses are highlighted.
It underscores inadequate attention given to the economic,
social and health needs of the increasing numbers of youth and
the rising number of elderly people. It also notes the need to
mobilize financial resources to support the POA.
PROPOSED ACTIONS: The draft report contains actions to overcome
constraints to creating an enabling environment. On global
economic trends, it calls for:
promotion of a supportive economic environment to enable
developing countries to achieve sustained economic growth;
establishment of mechanisms for the management and
regulation of capital flows;
promotion of an open, equitable international trading
system by stimulating direct investment, reducing debt burdens
and ensuring that SAPs are responsive to social and
environmental concerns;
integration of gender equity, equality and empowerment of
women in sustainable development policy initiatives;
reformation of health sectors and sector-wide approaches
to
prioritize gender-sensitive RH services and ensure universal
access; and
training of planners and decision-makers at national and
local levels to understand population, environment and macro-
economic linkages.
Proposed actions on the environment emphasize the need to:
initiate legislative and administrative measures to
promote
balanced patterns of consumption and production;
integrate demographic factors into planning processes;
develop better frameworks to analyze population,
environment and poverty linkages; and
conduct additional research on the impact of environmental
degradation on health, especially womens RH.
Special attention to the needs of countries emerging from
conflicts and crises to strengthen their capacity to deal with
population and development issues is proposed.
On migration, the draft report stresses the need to:
address the root causes of migration;
promote dialogue between sending, transient and receiving
countries to protect the human rights of refugees and migrants
and provide access to social services; and
ensure the fair treatment and rights of migrants, refugees
and displaced persons, including providing for their RH needs.
The report also calls on States to become parties to the
International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All
Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families.
Concerning the population age structure, governments are urged
to invest in education and skills training for young people,
provide funds for programmes to meet their SRH needs and ensure
the economic and social security of older persons, particularly
ageing women. It emphasizes intergenerational solidarity through
better communication and mutual support.
GENDER EQUALITY, EQUITY AND EMPOWERMENT OF WOMEN
The draft report reaffirms the fundamental role played by the
POA in transforming population and development programmes and
particularly in changing the quality of womens lives.
PROGRESS TO DATE: There is progress to date in the following
areas: establishment or reinforcement of initiatives promoting
integration of a gender perspective into polices and programmes;
removal of laws discriminating against women and girls and
enactment of laws protecting them; initiatives to promote
participation of women at policy- and decision-making levels;
implementation of measures for institutional strengthening that
incorporate gender equality, including capacity-building for
staff and laws, legal awareness creation and advocacy to
eradicate violence against women; advocacy for protection of the
girl child and promotion of her well-being; and gains in
ensuring that men take equal responsibility for their own and
their partners SRH.
CONSTRAINTS AND ISSUES: The draft report identifies constraints
and issues in the area of gender equity, equality and womens
empowerment, including: lack of understanding of how to
interpret gender concepts in differing social and cultural
contexts; legal provisions preventing women from exercising
their rights; lack of legal protection for women exercising
their human and particularly sexual rights; violence at all
stages of womens life cycle in private and public life; gross
under-representation of women in positions of power and
decision-making due to poverty, illiteracy, access to education,
inadequate financial resources, patriarchal mentality, gender
hostility and the dual burden of domestic and occupational
obligations; inequitable remuneration of women for work of equal
value and negative impacts on womens training and promotion
opportunities; susceptibility of vulnerable groups of women to
marginalization in policy and programme efforts and lack of
consultation to develop strategies that meet their needs;
negative impacts on the SRH of the girl child caused by
prevalence of cultural attitudes promoting the low value of
girls; harmful traditional practices such as FGM, use of sex-
selection technologies and sexual servitude; lack of gender-
disaggregated data; lack of human technical capacity to
undertake gender analysis and design and implement and monitor
programmes from a gender perspective; and social and cultural
attitudes constraining men from sharing in family
responsibilities and lack of male engagement in the discourse on
gender equality and empowerment of women.
PROPOSED ACTIONS: The draft report proposes the following
actions to incorporate a gender perspective into policies,
programmes and activities:
further developing and strengthening the ICPD
reproductive
rights approach to population and development policies and
programmes;
forging operational linkages between the POA, the
Beijing
Platform for Action and other international instruments in order
to promote gender equality systematically and comprehensively;
formulating actions to eliminate negative traditional,
religious and cultural attitudes and practices that subjugate
women and reinforce gender inequalities;
adopting a gender perspective in all policy formulation
and
implementation processes and the delivery of services;
having all data and information systems ensure
availability
of gender-disaggregated data;
addressing the health and well-being of the increased
proportion of ageing women through special programmes, services
and institutional mechanisms and monitoring and addressing the
needs of other vulnerable groups; and
removing all gender gaps and inequalities pertaining to
womens participation in the labor market, with implementation
of policies or legislation to establish equal pay for work of
equal value.
Actions proposed to promote gender equality include:
strengthening institutional capacity and technical
expertise of staff in government, NGOs and civil society to
promote gender mainstreaming;
promoting gender awareness education of children to
eliminate discrimination against women;
ensuring future empowerment of women by enforcing
enrollment of girls in school;
accelerating womens participation in political and all
policy and decision-making levels;
developing strategies to promote gender equality at
family
level;
ratifying CEDAW with removal of existing reservations;
establishing laws to protect womens human rights and
advocacy to enable women to claim their rights; and
encouraging media and parliamentarians to help improve
attitudes about the value placed by society on women.
Actions proposed to address violence include:
zero-tolerance for all forms of violence against women
and
children through an integrated, holistic and multi-disciplinary
approach from a life-cycle perspective;
protection of the girl child, particularly from harmful
traditional practices, and promotion of her access to health,
education and life opportunities;
action to promote a positive self-image and self-esteem
among girls and women through information, education and
communication strategies; and
removal of gender stereotypes from educational
curricula.
The draft report proposes the following actions to promote male
responsibility and partnership with women:
involving men in defining positive male role models to
encourage a more proactive role in supporting and safeguarding
womens RH and rights and facilitate gender-sensitization of
boys;
addressing mens SRH and supporting men to take
responsibility for their sexual behavior;
developing capacity-building strategies enabling men and
all stakeholders to understand gender-related concepts; and
promoting advocacy by all leaders, especially influential
men, in support of gender equality, empowerment of women and
protection of the girl child.
REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH, INCLUDING FAMILY PLANNING AND SEXUAL
HEALTH, AND REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS
The draft report notes as background that the ICPD endorsed the
principle that all couples and individuals should be enabled to
make voluntary reproductive choices free of coercion, and
ensured this ability was recognized as a basic right. It notes
that RH, including family planning and sexual health, includes
the full range of components pertaining to the SRH of women and
men from adolescence through the life cycle.
PROGRESS TO DATE: Progress since 1994 includes momentum in
policy and programme development in RH and rights, better
understanding of a human rights-based approach to RH, including
family planning and sexual health, movement away from vertical
service provision, demographic targets and quotas, and promotion
of adolescent RH. Specifically, it notes progress in, inter
alia: developing specific policies and/or legislative or
institutional changes in RH and rights; integrating RH services
into health delivery systems; providing high quality, client-
responsive services ensuring free and informed consent;
promoting male involvement in SRH; making available a wider
range of contraceptive choices; recognizing the risks of
maternal mortality and morbidity; acknowledging unsafe abortion
as a serious public health concern and establishing services
where abortion is legal; and demonstrating that efforts to
prevent STDs, including HIV/AIDS, are cost-effective.
ISSUES AND CONSTRAINTS: The draft report identifies issues and
constraints regarding reproductive rights, including
inconsistent reflection of human rights approaches in policies,
insufficient political will, and reservations to Article 12 of
CEDAW (discrimination of women in health) by 54 countries.There
is insufficient understanding of how best to implement the RH
approach, a need to implement measures to safeguard RH when
reforming health sectors, and a tendency to shape RH policies
primarily by the health sector, excluding other important
sectors. Other issues and constraints include: lack of service
providers trained in RH care; increased risk of unwanted
pregnancy and STDs including HIV/AIDS due to lack of information
and increasing unprotected sex among adolescents; exacerbation
of RH needs of women and adolescents in refugee or emergency
situations; limited progress in male involvement and
responsibility in SRH; lack of access to family planning
information and services for some 150 million women;
unacceptable risk of maternal mortality and morbidity for women
in developing countries and countries with economies in
transition; unsafe abortion as a major public health concern and
cause of maternal mortality; and continued spread of STDs and
HIV/AIDS, particularly among adolescents.
PROPOSED ACTIONS: The draft report contains a number of
proposed
actions related to RH. On reproductive rights, it recommends:
enacting and implementing policies to meet Cairo
commitments that ensure reproductive rights, gender equity and
equality;
ensuring that policies and RH programme implementation
are
based on human rights and cover the life cycle;
strengthening knowledge and confidence of women, men and
adolescents to enable them to claim their reproductive rights
and promote their RH;
ensuring womens human rights include their right to
have
control over and decide freely and responsibly on matters
related to their sexuality free of coercion, discrimination and
violence;
withdrawing government reservations to CEDAW; and
developing within the UN system methodologies and
indicators to promote and monitor womens rights, particularly
in SRH.
Regarding development and implementation of RH programmes, it
recommends:
ensuring health sector reform and sector-wide approaches
maintain high priority for SRH, and ensuring equity of access to
information and services;
ensuring governments facilitate participatory policy
development processes;
engaging all relevant sectors;
promoting decentralization of health planning and
implementation;
establishing long-term strategic partnerships between
governments and all civil society partners;
strengthening integration of services where it will
result
in increased acceptability, utilization and cost-effectiveness;
increasing and monitoring investment in standards of
service provision;
increasing investment in RH training;
developing quantitative and qualitative indicators to
monitor progress;
strengthening community-based services and social and
subsidized marketing and exploring new partnerships with the
private sector;
allocating resources to meet growing demand for access
to
information, counseling, services and follow-up on the full
range of safe and effective contraceptive methods;
recognizing and promoting safe motherhood as a human
rights
issue;
training and deploying more primary health care workers
with life-saving skills;
developing effective referral systems;
ensuring availability of skilled workers to provide
quality
services, particularly emergency obstetric care;
establishing intermediate benchmarks for maternal
mortality;
promoting mens understanding of their roles and
responsibilities;
recognizing and addressing unsafe abortion as a public
health problem;
reducing unsafe abortions by diminishing unwanted
pregnancy
through provision of family planning information and services,
including emergency contraception, and investment in training
and equipping of medical service personnel to manage
complications;
reviewing laws containing punitive measures against
women
who have undergone illegal abortions;
affirming commitment to POA paragraph 8.25; and
developing a system for monitoring implementation.
Regarding STDs and HIV/AIDS, the draft report recommends:
ensuring governments commit to action to prevent HIV
transmission and improve care for those infected;
providing resources to UNAIDS;
initiating intensive and urgent action against the
epidemic;
ensuring prevention of HIV/AIDS as an integral part of
RH;
securing access to available technologies, such as the
female and male condom;
ensuring service and communication campaigns include
sexuality and gender power;
ensuring men do not threaten womens human rights
through
practices and behavior that put women at risk;
investing in STD prevention and treatment programmes;
developing goals and benchmarks to monitor progress in
prevention;
including HIV/AIDS modules in adolescent sex education
curricula;
ensuring an environment free of discrimination for
people
infected with HIV/AIDS and making available in developing
countries the drugs they require; and
supporting research and development.
On adolescents, the draft report proposes that:
ensuring SRH programmes for adolescents encompass sex
education and provision of contraceptives, basic health care,
STD prevention and treatment, effective referral services and
counseling;
developing innovative strategies that provide
adolescents
with SRH information that promotes gender equality, responsible
sexual behavior and unwanted pregnancy prevention;
developing and implementing national plans for
investment
in youth with full involvement of adolescents;
educating and involving parents in providing SRH
information to adolescents;
ensuring health care providers attitudes do not
restrict
adolescents access to services and information;
including sexual education in school curricula at all
levels and ensuring teachers receive adequate training;
providing sexual health services for all adolescents who
demand them;
ensuring fathers fulfill their responsibility to be
positive role models; and
reaffirming POA paragraph 5.9 (on family-sensitive
housing,
work, health, social security and education policies).
The draft report also recommends that refugee women and others
in emergency situations receive appropriate health care,
including RH care, as well as greater protection from sexual
violence, and all health relief workers be given basic training
in RH information and services.
STRENGTHENING PARTNERSHIPS
The section of the draft report on strengthening partnerships
recognizes the importance of a broad-based and interactive
collaboration among governments, the international community and
civil society in implementing the goals of the POA.
PROGRESS TO DATE: The draft report reflects the virtual
consensus at the Forum that significant advances in
strengthening partnerships have been made since Cairo. It
identifies a conceptual shift among stakeholders towards human-
centered development and the life-cycle concept of SRH. It notes
that many governments have adopted significant measures to
involve civil society in the policy- and decision-making
process, highlighting particular achievements in countries with
economies in transition. It points out that some countries have
taken steps to strengthen civil society by providing funding and
removing legal impediments. It reports that UN inter-agency
coordination has been enhanced and notes in particular the
formation in 1995 of the Basic Social Services for All Task
Force by 18 UN organizations and agencies, including the Bretton
Woods institutions. It underscores increased involvement of
womens and youth groups, religious communities, the private
sector and advocacy organizations, and praises the success of
parliamentarians who have secured more government funding and
adopted legislation on RH and gender-based violence, including
FGM.
CONSTRAINTS AND ISSUES: On policy formulation and programme
implementation, one constraint relevant to strengthening
partnerships is the frequent absence of clear legal frameworks,
regulations and guidelines to facilitate partnerships with NGOs.
The draft report also notes limited progress in strengthening
the human resource, institutional and financial capacities of
civil society organizations, as well as their weaknesses in
transparency, accountability and networking.
Other constraints and issues identified in the draft report
include: constraints on government resources available to
support NGOs; problems in strategic planning for NGOs dependent
on external funding; a lack of mechanisms for coordinating and
funding partnerships at the national level; the frequent absence
of multi-sectoral frameworks for identifying key issues for
joint action and indicators for assessing the contribution of
civil society groups; the need to increase private sector and
youth involvement; and the importance of a positive and stable
political environment.
PROPOSED ACTIONS: The draft report proposes a number of actions
that would operate on several levels. Regarding establishing an
enabling environment for effective partnerships, it says multi-
sectoral collaboration should be based on negotiation, agreed
intentions and explicit outcomes. It also recommends that
partnerships enhance the activity of governments rather than
substitute for it. It calls on governments to:
ensure a legal framework that gives legitimacy and
autonomy
to NGOs;
adopt policies and remove legal and bureaucratic obstacles
to involving civil society in achieving the POA objectives;
build partnerships with civil society groups from a broad
spectrum of society; and
work with civil society to clearly define each partners
role.
Governments and civil society should develop operational
guidelines so all programmes are either complementary or
conducted jointly. Systems should be transparent in order to
promote accountability, instruments to help assess and monitor
the interaction between the two sectors should exist, and youth
should participate at all levels of the policy and decision-
making process. Parliamentarians need to continue to establish
national and international networks, mobilize political support,
push for sufficient budgetary allocations, and work with the
health community on necessary legislative reform.
On strengthening the human resources and institutional
capacities of civil society, the draft report calls for
innovative financial and technical assistance from governments
and international groups, as well as a broader scope for
assistance, which could include direct funding for NGOs and
other non-state actors. NGOs should strengthen their capacities
and work at coalition-building and networking. South-South
cooperation should receive multi-sectoral support.
The draft report recommends strengthening and intensifying
social mobilization efforts by working more closely with the
media and the private sector and encouraging women in the
private sector to be workplace advocates for the POA. To promote
access to high quality RH and family planning services, it urges
cooperation with the private sector and medical professional
associations.
To strengthen collaboration among UN and intergovernmental
organizations, the draft report calls for improved inter-agency
coordination at all levels on selected population and
development themes and inclusion of the development banks in
partnership activities. UNFPA should continue to focus on
including civil society in partnerships and should support
government efforts in this regard. It should strengthen the NGO
advisory committee to UNFPA at the international level and
establish committees at regional and national levels, develop
guidelines for partnership-building and strengthen relations
with countries with economies in transition.
RESOURCE FLOWS AND FINANCING FOR FURTHER IMPLEMENTATION OF THE
POA
The section of the draft report on resource flows and financing
for further implementation of the POA stresses the need for
governments to commit themselves at the highest political level
to achieving the goals of the ICPD. The report highlights the
POA estimates and projections on necessary financial resources
and takes special note of The Hague Parliamentarians, Youth and
NGO Forums calls for the mobilization of adequate resources for
population and development activities.
PROGRESS TO DATE: The draft report identifies progress to date:
international assistance for population activities increased
from US$1.3 billion in 1993 to US$1.9-2.0 billion in 1995-97
with a small decrease in the last year; the percentage of ODA
earmarked for population assistance is at its highest level and
preliminary figures for 1997 show that donor countries
contributed 3.09% of their total ODA to population assistance;
developing countries are mobilizing domestic resources for
population activities and estimates provide a crude global
figure of almost US$8 billion for domestic financial resources
for population activities in 1997; and the private sector,
including private foundations and NGOs, is playing an increasing
role in the mobilization of resource flows.
ISSUES AND CONSTRAINTS: The draft report identifies a number of
issues and constraints. Funding for population activities has
not increased at a rate that would ensure mobilizing the
required US$17 billion by 2000. Preliminary data for 1997
indicates a funding decrease to just under US$1.9 billion and
external sources have met 33% of their ICPD commitment; total
ODA is decreasing, having declined from $56.5 billion in 1993 to
$47.6 billion in 1997; most domestic resource flows originate in
only a few large countries and developing countries are
generally unable to generate the necessary resources from
domestic sources to fund national population programmes;
economic and political difficulties are impeding efforts in a
number of countries to mobilize domestic resources required to
implement national policies and programmes; shortfalls in
resource mobilization require heightened attention to
improvements in the efficiency and effectiveness of resource
utilization; the HIV/AIDS epidemic has progressed faster than
forecasted, requiring additional resources; and youth needs for
SRH remain inadequately addressed.
PROPOSED ACTIONS: To mobilize resources, the draft report calls
for countries to:
fulfill their financial commitments and strive to reach
the
nominal 0.7% of GDP allocation to ODA and in this context, at a
minimum, reach the nominal commitment of 4% of ODA to population
activities with consideration of increasing the minimum to 5%;
increase levels of funding to UNFPA;
make special efforts to meeting, at a minimum, all
US$1.3
billion for HIV/AIDS prevention in the year 2000, as called for
in the POA, targeting young populations in particular;
mobilizing additional resources for broader population
and
social sector objectives in areas not costed in the POA, with
further consideration of the 20/20 Initiative for resource
mobilization;
redoubling advocacy efforts between and within countries
to
mobilize the necessary additional resources, including specific
efforts by parliamentarians to increase support for population
and RH programmes;
giving population and RH concerns the necessary
allocations
in integrated and sector-wide programmes;
ensuring an increased role for the private sector,
including private foundations and NGOs, in the mobilizing
resource flows;
ensuring donor funding to support the activities to
implement the POA and build capacity;
mobilizing special support from external donor sources
for
countries least able to generate domestic resources for
population and RH programmes, especially for initiation of
integrated RH programmes;
increasing resource flows directed to meeting adolescent
and RH needs, with at least 20% of donor allocations to RH
programmes being earmarked to meet the information and service
needs of adolescents, and involving youth in programme design,
execution and monitoring; and
using qualitative and quantitative performance indicators
in donor allocation decisions that take full account of the POA
recommendations.
For efficiency and effectiveness in the use of resources, the
draft report proposes:
improving use of available funds through actions
including
implementing strategic planning approaches, minimizing financial
and human resource waste arising from duplication in national
programmes, and exploring the use of management systems linking
programme resource decisions to outcomes;
directing government and donor resources to promote
access
to information and services for poor populations;
increasing accountability through technical and
managerial
capacity-building and more transparent information systems on
resource allocations and expenditures;
coordinating, harmonizing and increasing the flexibility
of
donor financing policies and initiatives; and
strengthening mechanisms to coordinate national RH
programmes in developing countries.
The report also recommends actions concerning new mechanisms to
generate additional resources to meet ICPD goals:
exploring selective use of user fees, social marketing
and
other forms of cost recovery, along with innovative financing
approaches;
promoting and supporting expanding South-South cooperation
and information exchange on cost-effective programme strategies
and best practices;
strengthening partnerships to mobilize resources;
utilizing more efficient mechanisms to reduce external
debt
in order to encourage allocations to population and RH
programmes, including debt cancellation and debt swaps for basic
social service investments; and
advocating increased funding for population and RH from
international financial institutions.
The draft report also proposes the following actions:
supporting methodological research, including
operational
research to improve monitoring of resource flows for the costed
integrated population and RH package;
monitoring by levels of poverty and gender;
monitoring financial flows to the non-costed portions of
the POA, especially those addressing gender concerns and
population and environment interactions; and
assigning higher priority to technical discussions
evaluating the POA cost projections, with special attention to
the area of safe motherhood.
A BRIEF ANALYSIS OF THE FORUM
The gale force winds that heralded the start of the Forum died
down after a week characterized by optimism and a renewed will
to continue the battle of the everyday. Although the Forum has
ended, the discourse for further POA implementation has just
begun. In the final hours of the Forum, many participants were
expressing sentiments of satisfaction with the process and the
outcome, observing that the Forum had re-energized the spirit of
cooperation and re-focused efforts on the far-reaching goals
established in Cairo. Delegates will barely have time to catch
their breath before setting off to New York to roll up their
sleeves and begin actual negotiations to set the course for
further implementation, but there seemed to be general agreement
that the Forum provided a solid basis for the more difficult
steps ahead.
The Hague Forum was not about renegotiating Cairo, although
some
may have anticipated or even hoped for this. Rather it
contemplated country experiences to date, brought into focus
some emerging concerns and, above all, underscored the length of
the road ahead. Prior to the Forum the stage was set the
previous week when NGOs, parliamentarians and youth convened to
assess their own achievements and challenges in implementing the
POA and formulate recommendations that provided valuable input
to the Forum. Their impact on the Forum was considerable, with
youth taking center stage in the debates on reproductive health,
partnerships and resource allocations. Their proposal that at
least 20% of donor allocations for reproductive health
programmes be earmarked for initiatives to meet the information
and service needs of adolescents was supported by a number of
delegations and found its way into the Forum reports proposed
actions. This proposal was considered by many to be one of the
Forums major accomplishments. This was due to the fact that
issues relating to adolescent sexual and reproductive health,
especially the significant increase in HIV/AIDS among young
people, have come to the fore in the five years since Cairo. The
enthusiastic and energetic participation of youth was
highlighted by many as one of the most significant features of
the Forum and a reflection that Cairos call for increased
partnerships and civil society involvement was becoming a
reality.
Hillary Clintons keynote address provided significant impetus
to discussions in The Hague. Her appearance not once but twice,
the second time following her attendance at the funeral of King
Hussein of Jordan, was seen by many as a true demonstration of
her commitment to championing population and development issues,
particularly reproductive health and womens rights. Her
presence also served to rally significant media attention to the
Forum, and provided considerable inspiration to Forum delegates.
Another accomplishment that garnered particular attention was
the advancement of womens empowerment and reproductive health
and rights over the past five years. To no ones surprise, these
emerged as high-profile issues during the Forum, and the
abortion issue again generated a contentious debate, with no
apparent change of stance from either camp since Cairo (with the
notable exception of the legalization of abortion in South
Africa in 1996). There were a few areas where the Forum report
was seen as pushing the envelope beyond Cairo, however,
including its highlighting of the recent availability of
emergency contraception (the morning after pill) as a means to
reduce unsafe abortion. Calls to incorporate concepts and
language from the Beijing Platform for Action, which was an
important milestone in advancing womens issues since Cairo,
were considered by many as a significant output of the Forum and
an effort to move the agenda forward. This was a point of
contention, however, because some of the more conservative
delegations who objected to elements of the Platform, such as
recommendations relating to sexual rights, were opposed to
including Beijing language in the Forum report. They attempted
to block its inclusion by reiterating that the Forum was not
mandated to reopen Cairo. Significantly, however, the draft
report does include a proposal from NGOs to review laws
containing punitive measures against women who have undergone
illegal abortions, which is based on a Beijing recommendation.
When it came to strengthening partnerships, Florence Manguyus
introductory remarks in the Main Committee, united we stand,
divided we fail, epitomized the spirit of cooperation necessary
for successful POA implementation. Most delegates agreed that
involvement of civil society in implementing the POA has been
one of the areas where real progress has been made and which has
greatly contributed to progress made in other areas. The spirit
of partnership was embodied in the degree and diversity of civil
society participation in the Forum and in the willingness
expressed by governments to cooperate with other stakeholders
nationally and internationally. The Forums recognition that
civil society groups need assistance in strengthening their
human resources and institutional capacities is an indication
that their involvement and valuable contributions to advancing
the Cairo agenda will only be strengthened in the future.
Throughout the week, the need for resource mobilization was
repeatedly highlighted as being pivotal to implementation of the
POA. The failure of many donors to fulfill their financial
commitments was identified as the single most significant
constraint to implementing the POA. The silver lining on the
cloud came in the inspirational form of Hillary Clintons
announcement of US President Bill Clintons proposal to
contribute US$25 million to UNFPA next year. This gave delegates
renewed optimism that the ambitious programmes they had been
discussing would be funded and implemented. In spite of the
galvanizing potential of this announcement, the size of the
shortfall remains ominous. The solution was put most neatly by
Dutch Minister for Development Cooperation Eveline Herfkens when
she threw down the gauntlet for all recalcitrant donors by
stating put your money where your mouth is.
The Forums significant accomplishments in light of its modest
aims leave little to be said about its shortcomings. A few
delegates felt it could have been more productive if there had
been more time to formulate concrete measures. They concluded
that the non-binding nature of the Forums report and its lack
of specifics in some areas means that this meeting will play
only a limited role in determining the outcome of the all-
important PrepCom in March and UN Special Session in late June.
Although some also criticized the meeting and some donor
governments for expounding rhetoric that has yet to be backed up
by action, no one can deny that the Forum has served to inspire,
renew commitment and strengthen the determination to advance
Cairos ambitious goals. It is this renewed energy that could be
just what it is needed to push delegates to achieve further
progress in the coming months. As one delegate aptly stated,
The wind toward success is blowing. We cannot change the
direction of the wind, so let us adjust our sails.
THINGS TO LOOK FOR BEFORE THE UNGASS
COMMISSION ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: The CSD Ad hoc Working
Group on Consumption and Production Patterns and Tourism and
Sustainable Development will meet in New York on 22-26 February
1999. The Ad hoc Working Group on Oceans and Seas and the Review
of the Programme of Action for the Sustainable Development of
Small Island Developing States will meet in New York from 1-5
March 1999. The CSD will hold its 7th session from 19-30 April
1999. For information contact: Andrey Vasilyev, Division for
Sustainable Development; tel: +1 (212) 963-5949; fax: +1 (212)
963-4260; e-mail: vasilyev@un.org; Internet:
http://www.un.org/esa/sustdev/.
COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN: The 43rd session of the CSW
meets from 1-19 March 1999 in New York. From 1-12 March there
will be an in-session Working Group on the Elaboration of a
Draft Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Elimination of
All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW). The last week
will serve as the PrepCom for Beijing+5. For information
contact: the UN Division for the Advancement of Women, United
Nations, Room DC2-1204, New York, NY 10017 USA; e-mail:
daw@un.org; Internet: http://www.un.org/womenwatch.
COMMISSION ON POPULATION AND DEVELOPMENT: The 32nd session of
the CPD will convene from 24-31 March 1999 in New York and will
act as the PrepCom for the Special Session of the General
Assembly to review and appraise implementation of the ICPD POA.
For more information contact: United Nations Population Fund,
220 East 42nd St, New York, NY 10017 USA; fax: +1 (212) 557-
6416; e-mail: dayal@unfpa.org; Internet:
http://www.undp.org/popin/icpd5.htm.
MINISTERIAL MEETING ON REGIONAL COOPERATION ON IRREGULAR
MIGRATION: This meeting will be hosted by the Government of
Thailand from 21-23 April 1999 in Bangkok. Invitations to attend
this meeting have been sent out at ministerial level. For more
information contact: Peter Schatzer, International Organization
for Migration; tel: +41-22-717-9278, fax: +41-22-798-6150, e-
mail: schatzer@geneva.iom.ch.
COMMISSION ON HUMAN SETTLEMENTS: The 17th session of the
Commission on Human Settlements will meet from 5-14 May 1999 in
Nairobi, Kenya. For more information contact: Information and
External Relations, UN Centre for Human Settlements, UNCHS
(Habitat); tel: +254-2-623067; fax: +254-2-624060; Internet:
http://www.unhabitat.org/.
COPENHAGEN+5: The Preparatory Committee for the Special Session
of the General Assembly on the Implementation of the Outcome of
the World Summit for Social Development (WSSD) and Further
Initiatives will hold its first substantive session in New York
from 17-28 May 1999. The second session will be held in April
2000, with the Special Session to take place later in 2000. For
more information contact: Secretariat, UN Commission for Social
Development; tel: +1 (212) 963-6763; fax: +1 (212) 963-3062; e-
mail: ngoran@un.org; Internet:
http://www.un.org/esa/socdev/wssdcal1.htm.
SPECIAL SESSION OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY ON ICPD+5: The Special
Session of the UN General Assembly will meet from 30 June-2 July
1999 in New York to review and appraise implementation of the
POA five years after the ICPD. For more information contact:
United Nations Population Fund, 220 East 42nd St, New York, NY
10017 USA; fax: +1 (212) 557-6416; e-mail: dayal@unfpa.org;
Internet: http://www.undp.org/popin/icpd5.htm.
| This issue of the Earth Negotiations Bulletin �
(enb@iisd.org) is written and edited by Richard Campbell
(richcam@hotmail.com), Angela Churie (churie@l.kth.se),
Kira Schmidt (kiras@iisd.org), Chris Spence
(spencechris@hotmail.com). The Editor is Pamela Chasek,
Ph.D. (pam@iisd.org) and the Managing Editor is L. J.
"Kimo" Goree (kimo@iisd.org). Digital editing by David
Fernau (david@virtualstockholm.net). The Sustaining Donors
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Bulletin during 1999 is provided by the United Kingdom
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