A Project of the United Nations Association of  Pasadena and of Americans for UNFPA (United Nations Population Fund).

34 Million Friends is now (as of 7-7- 2008) a proud member of the Partnership for Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health, for which the World Health Organization serves as the Secretariat. Please see www.who.int/pmnch

Please read the article below: "Family Planning Gets Mere Sliver of AID Pie"

 


 

   U.S. Gifts & Pledges

 Through June 30, 2008 

$ 3,865,542.65  

Contribute  

 

Be one of 34 million Americans to contribute at least $1 to our grassroots movement for the women of the world. Invite others to join you.

BY MAIL:
Americans for UNFPA - 34 Million Friends
P.O. Box 681
TomsRiver, NJ 08754

Make check out to:
Americans for UNFPA

This P.O. Box is exclusively
for 34 Million Friends

You can also contribute online to 34 Million Friends at Americans for UNFPA website. ($10 minimum)All contributions are tax deductible.

Contact Jane Roberts at

julianrob@aol.com


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Please take a minute to look at this inspiring book by Congresswoman Carolyn B. Maloney (click here). The book says very nice things about 34 Million Friends!

I (Jane) also recommend Robert Engelman's MORE: Population, Nature, and What Women Want. Engelman is vice-president for research at the Worldwatch Institute. www.MOREthebook.org

 

 

Jane Roberts and Lois Abraham established 34 Million Friends of UNFPA in 2002 when the Bush Administration first announced they would withhold the $34 million that Congress allocated to UNFPA. Today the total amount of blocked funds stands at $195 million.

The idea behind this project is to ask 34 million Americans to donate at least $1 and in turn, send a message that Americans support UNFPA.

UNFPA helps the most vulnerable women in the world plan their families, give birth safely, and protect themselves from HIV/AIDS. It promotes the rights of women by encouraging equal access to food, education, and healthcare. UNFPA works worldwide to eliminate gender-based violence including female genital cutting and rape used as a weapon of war. Show American support by becoming one of the 34 Million Friends and getting involved. People outside the United States (non-Americans) can donate at
http://www.unfpa.org/support/friends/34million.htm.

Please spread the word far and wide.

Jane wrote a poem about 34 Million Friends that music legend Odetta put to music and it's now a video. She has also written a book called 34 Million Friends of the Women of the World. Here is a link to Jane's article in The Interdependent, the magazine  of the United Nations Association, Winter edition, 2008

 

There was a worldwide conference on Safe Motherhood in London October 18-20, 2007. Jane was there and here is her report. www.womendeliver.org. 

 I just returned from the Women Deliver Conference in London. Nearly 2000 experts and policy makers on women’s health came from around the globe to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the Safe Motherhood Initiative. Sadly maternal mortality rates have remained relatively stagnant over that time. Thoraya Obaid, Executive Director of UNFPA, said on the first morning that policy makers have to believe that women’s rights are human rights. Surely surviving childbirth in the 21st century should be a human right.

 

After Women Deliver I gave a talk at the Club of Rome in Brussels and then 11 talks in 5 days in New Jersey. I’m home now, safe, sound and with great memories.

I can't emphasize enough the importance of media attention in bringing policies related to women to the fore. At Women Deliver I watched a BBC documentary called Dead Mums Don't Cry. The BBC spent a week at a health care clinic in Chad where Dr. Grace Kodindo, the doctor in charge, struggled to help women survive. During that one week a 12 year old girl died from an abortion, at least one woman died of eclampsia, a blood pressure disorder during pregnancy which if treated in time with magnesium sulfate can save the life of the mother and baby. and at least two women died of hemorrhage, a frequent postpartum killer of women. The clinic lacked basic supplies. The result of this documentary which was shown several times in Britain and in Chad, was that this clinic now has most of what it needs. Would that our film (more about the film later) could do for the world what this documentary did for Dr. Kodindo's clinic.

Incidentally the total fertility rate in Chad is 6.6 children per woman. Family planning is utterly crucial for this country and for many others throughout the world to have a chance. The family planning part of the worldwide reproductive health budget has shrunk considerably over recent years. At Women Deliver, the British government announced a grant of 100 million pounds to UNFPA over 5 years mostly for health care commodities with an emphasis on family planning. What a difference with our indifferent government!

 

The Lancet, the prestigious British medical journal put out a special edition for Women Deliver. On the front in big letters: "Since the human race began, women have delivered for society. It is time now for the world to deliver for women." Well said!

 

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Here is a very informative article about family planning only getting a sliver of the reproductive health pie. Thoraya Obaid, Executive Director of UNFPA, is a strong voice for making family planning universally available. Demand for family planning is increasing sharply every year with large numbers of young people coming into their reproductive years.

 

Family Planning Gets Mere Sliver of Aid Pie

Sat, 2008-04-12 04:08 See http://www.asiantribune.com/?q=node/10522

By Thalif Deen - Inter Press Service

United Nations, 12 April, (IPS): The United Nations warns that a sharp decline in international funding for reproductive health is threatening global efforts to reduce poverty, improve health and empower women worldwide.

"This is especially evident in the case of funding for family planning where absolute dollar amounts are lower than they were in 1995," says Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, in a report released here.

If this trend is not reversed, he cautions, it will have "serious implications for the ability of countries to address the unmet need for such services, and could undermine efforts to prevent unintended pregnancies and reduce maternal and infant mortality."

Compounding the problem further, the largest share of population funding is now being diverted to fight HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases (STDs).

Thoraya Ahmed Obaid, executive director of the U.N. Population (UNFPA), says funding for family planning as a percentage of all population assistance has dropped considerably, from 55 percent in 1995 to 7.0 percent in 2005.

"The victims of this funding gap are poor women in poor countries who cannot exercise their reproductive rights and plan their families," she told IPS. "It is a serious problem that needs to be urgently addressed."

Addressing a weeklong meeting of the U.N. Commission on Population and Development (CPD), which concluded Friday, Obaid said there are some 200 million women in the developing world with unmet needs for effective contraception.

The highest number, she said, is in Africa.

"The result is increasing numbers of unwanted pregnancies, rising rates of unsafe abortion, and increased risks to the lives of women and children," she told the Commission.

The current crisis, Obaid pointed out, is also threatening to undermine the U.N.'s Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), including reduction in extreme poverty and improvement on maternal health.

"We will not attain the Millennium Development Goals, especially MDG 5 on maternal health, if we do not ensure universal access to reproductive health," Obaid said.

"Sexual and reproductive health is essential to women's empowerment and gender equality. And family planning is key to maternal and child health," she added.

Obaid noted that research indicates that ensuring access to family planning alone would reduce maternal deaths by 20 to 35 percent and child deaths by 20 percent.

At the same time, overall donor assistance to population activities continues to increase.

Following the landmark International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) in Cairo in 1994, there was little progress because increases were negligible. But by 2005, donor assistance stood at 7.4 billion dollars. The figure for 2006 is expected to reach about 8.1 billion dollars, with further increases to 9.8 billion dollars in 2007 and 10.3 billion dollars in 2008.

The ICPD estimated about 8.0 percent of total population assistance for STDs/HIV/AIDS; 62 percent for family planning services; 29 percent for basic reproductive health services; and one percent for research, data and population and development policy analysis.

But actual spending in 2005, for example, saw a dramatic increase for STDs (72 percent), while funding for family planning services declined to 7.0 percent and basic reproductive health services to 17 percent, with an increase of 4.0 percent for research and analysis.

The 16-page U.N. report, which went before the CPD, predicts that the increase in funding for AIDS-related activities will continue, primarily for prevention, as well as treatment and care, and especially for funding for antiretroviral therapy.

"There are fears that the larger share of funding that goes to AIDS activities might distract the attention for the necessary funding for the other three elements of the costed population package," the report notes.

Still, it argues, there has also been an escalation of current needs and costs, in all four areas, compared with original ICPD estimates in 1994. Since that time, the population and health situation in the world has also changed dramatically.

The HIV/AIDS crisis is far worse than anticipated while infant, child and maternal mortality remain unacceptably high in many parts of the world. In addition, continues the report, health care costs have increased substantially since 1994.

As a result, the ICPD targets are not sufficient to meet current developing-country needs in all four areas.

"It is essential that all governments, of both donor and developing countries, re-commit themselves to implementing the objectives of the Conference (ICPD) and mobilising the resources required to meet these objective, given current needs," the report adds.

Without a firm commitment to population, reproductive health and gender issues, "it is unlikely that the goals and targets of the Conference and the Millennium Summit (and MDGs) will be met," the report concludes.

- Inter Press Service (IPS) News Agency -

Awards

Jane Roberts and Lois Abraham were nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize as part of the 1000 Women for the Nobel Peace Prize 2005 project under the patronage of the Swiss Commission for UNESCO.

 
                    

  Jane Roberts is looking forward to coordinating her activities and outreach with the United Nations Association, Pasadena, CA chapter: www.unapasadena.org