The Guardian (USA)

Trump takes war on abortion worldwide as policy cuts off funds

- Sarah Boseley Health editor

The Trump administra­tion has taken its war on abortion worldwide, cutting off all funding to any overseas organisati­on or clinic that will not agree to a complete ban on even discussing it.

The Mexico City policy, dubbed the “global gag” by its critics, denies US federal funds to any organisati­on involved in providing abortion services overseas or counsellin­g women about them. It was instituted by the then US president Ronald Reagan and has been revoked by every Democrat and reinstated by every Republican president since.

But, under Trump, the net has been thrown wider and pulled tighter than ever. Sexual health organisati­ons have said women will die as a consequenc­e as they pursue dangerous DIY solutions or “back street” abortions instead.

In March, the US extended the gag, stating that any organisati­on counsellin­g women on abortion and using funds from elsewhere – even from its own government or a donor in another country – will no longer be eligible for any US funding. The diktat applies to all global health organisati­ons. HIV and children’s charities must sign up to the pledge, alongside those running sexual and reproducti­ve health clinics.

What that means for organisati­ons such as Marie Stopes Internatio­nal and the Internatio­nal Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF) is a blight on sexual and reproducti­ve health services even in countries where abortion is never offered because it is illegal.

Every time the global gag has been reimposed by a Republican president, rates of back street and self-administer­ed abortions sometimes ending in death have gone up, along with unwanted pregnancie­s. Two years since Trump’s original edict, on the day he came into office and in line with his pledge to religious groups he courted for votes, it is still early to assess the impact, but it is likely to be considerab­le.

“The global gag rule hits hardest the women living at the margins – the poorest, the most remote and those under 25,” said Ana Maria Bejar, the director of advocacy at IPPF. “Progress can only be made when we can expand access for women and girls, not by reducing it.

“The policy has had a disastrous impact for IPPF in [more than] 30 countries. Tailored services for contracept­ion, Zika informatio­n, maternal health, antenatal care, reproducti­ve cancers, and HIV prevention and treatment felt the brunt.

“Any cuts to critical, affordable, high-quality, integrated reproducti­ve healthcare is denying a woman or girl the right to decide what to do with her body, her life and her future.”

IPPF had 49 projects run by local member organisati­ons in 31 countries in Latin America and the Caribbean, sub-Saharan Africa, and South Asia in January 2017 when the rule came in. Services in some areas shrunk by up to 42% within the year and the impact is already visible.

In Kibera, one of Nairobi’s biggest slums, volunteers report a rise in sexually transmitte­d infections, such as syphilis, and unsafe abortions. An outreach family planning clinic arrives once a month instead of three to four times. In some rural areas of Kenya, such clinics have stopped completely. Some HIV clinics have closed.

In Dakar, Senegal, volunteers report a rise in unsafe abortions, teenage pregnancie­s and sexually transmitte­d infections in an impoverish­ed neighbourh­ood where three out of five clinics that had been funded by IPPF have closed.

Marie Stopes Internatio­nal is the other big funder of family planning services across the world. John Lotspeich, its director of external affairs, called the latest extension of the gag “quite outrageous … what they are saying is, even if an organisati­on’s money mainly comes from other organisati­ons, say the Danish government, there is a ban on that money from being used to discuss abortion”.

US funds, he points out, have never gone towards paying for abortion. There is a separate piece of legislatio­n that prevents it.

Marie Stopes Internatio­nal supports family planning services in many countries where abortion is illegal. Some of those have ended.

“It happened very quickly in 2017,” Lotspeich said. “Most outreach services in Uganda had to stop.” In Madagascar, they had to give their trucks back to the US Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (USAid). “They wouldn’t even let us buy them from them.

“Then there are examples in countries like Malawi, where only we and [the] IPPF are the providers.” They have had to stretch their resources, meaning fewer services are allocated across the country.

Sexual and reproducti­ve health is a sensitive area, highly vulnerable to changes in the political and moral climate.

Lotspeich said that within three to four months of Tanzania banning pregnant girls from attending school “some of our providers say they were seeing teenage girls coming in having tried to self-abort. Being pregnant, they couldn’t go to school, so they tried to take matters into their own hands.” There can be tragic consequenc­es.

The Danish and Canadian government­s have given MSI funding. The movement She Decides was started in response to Trump’s reimpositi­on of the gag by the Dutch government minister Lilianne Ploumen, along with her counterpar­ts in the government­s of Belgium, Denmark and Sweden. It has raised funds and championed women’s rights to sexual and reproducti­ve healthcare, including abortion, but it cannot match the loss of funds from the United States.

US money is being switched from the big family planning providers to faith groups that have a specifical­ly anti-abortion stance. Some are also opposed to modern contracept­ion. They will say they do family planning – but they teach “natural” methods and abstention. There is a change in the atmosphere and the argument.

In Verona in March, the World Congress of Families held its annual rally, declaring its commitment to “the right to life” from conception, as well as marriage being solely the union of one man and one woman for life. Just as hostile to LGBTI rights and abortion is the ultraconse­rvative CitizenGO, started in Spain but now promoting petitions in 50 countries. These movements are reinvigora­ted by Trump’s global war on abortion.

“We are starting to see this is a hugely political play,” Lotspeich said. “The Trump administra­tion is giving a lot of air cover for people to express these views that women’s rights are not paramount, even though they are enshrined in the Beijing declaratio­n and so on.”

The rhetorical battle has intensifie­d. She Decides is leading the fight back, taking on the cause of women’s rights all over the world. But while US money is denied to those who would help women have control over their bodies, the deaths and serious mental and physical harm will inevitably continue.

 ?? Photograph: The Washington Post/Getty Images ?? A doctor shows women an IUD while educating them about reproducti­ve health and their family planning options at the Marie Stopes Internatio­nal mobile clinic in Besakoa, Madagascar.
Photograph: The Washington Post/Getty Images A doctor shows women an IUD while educating them about reproducti­ve health and their family planning options at the Marie Stopes Internatio­nal mobile clinic in Besakoa, Madagascar.

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