Governments Commit More Aid for Contraception at UK Family Plannning Summit

Posted on | July 11, 2012 by Lisa Correnti |

Today on World Population Day, government officials and charitable foundations have convened at the UK Family Planning summit co-sponsored by the  Gates Foundation and DFID -  the UK’s development aid program, to seek financial commitments to further implement population control efforts in developing countries. Government official after government official and spokespersons for billionaires foundations are all reading from the same script; family planning programs are necessary to save lives of poor women and their children.  Their flawed methodology is the same; make long-term contraceptive methods available to poor women and adolescent girls in every area of the globe. The prevention of an unplanned pregnancy amounts to an averted maternal or infant death.

A late morning panel hosted by Dr. Rajiv Shah administrator of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) featured a re-commitment by the U.S. which has been funding reproductive health and family planning programs at $640 million since Hillary Clinton and President Obama have been in leadership. A video of Sec. Clinton praised the attendees and underscored the U.S. commitment to family planning restating “that reproductive rights are human rights.”

Financial commitments from this mornings sessions are the following:

UK (DFID): Aid for family planning will increase from £90 million each year to £180 million – more than £1.4 billion over eight years.
EU: Currently $100 million euro on Family Planning, pledged an additional $23M for commodities.
Germany: Doubling bilateral commitment from $50 to $100m every year from 2012 to 2015
Korea: Double its investment over next few years from 0.125 to .0.25%. Past year $5.4 million.
France: Commits to additional €100 million for FP
Australia: Australia plans to spend an additional AUD58 million over 5 years, doubling annual contributions to AUD53 million by 2016.
Hewitt Foundation: $20-22 mil for international population work which includes $13m for advocacy to assure support continues.
Packard Foundation: $24 million to be used for  1) demand 2) quality and 3) advocacy.
Michael Bloomberg: $50 million
Dutch: Increase of $100 million, from 370 to $470 million.

Pharmaceutical companies that are sure to capitalize on this initiative were also present to announce their contribution:

Merck announces $50million partnership with Gates Foundation with “choice as the central pillar.” Doubling capacity to reach increased demand for implants.
Pfizer: Expanding of Depo-Provera by 50% to increase supplies to $1 billion injectibles.

The afternoon panel should produce additional commitments.

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Turtle Bay and Beyond is a blog covering international law, policy and institutions. Our experts - at the UN, European Institutions, and elsewhere - explore an authentic understanding of international law, sovereignty, and the dignity of the human person. We expose those who would seek to impose a radical social vision that is contrary to these principles.

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