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- <text id=94TT1171>
- <link 94AG0023>
- <title>
- Sep. 05, 1994: Environment:Showdown in Cairo
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 05, 1994 Ready to Talk Now?:Castro
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 52
- Showdown In Cairo
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> A feminist agenda at next week's population conference stirs
- protests
- </p>
- <p>By Eugene Linden--With reporting by Hannah Bloch/New York, Greg Burke and Mimi
- Murphy/Rome and Amany Radwan/Cairo
- </p>
- <p> The United Nations could hardly have picked a more appropriate
- place for next week's International Conference on Population
- and Development than crowded, chaotic Cairo. Home to 14 million
- people, the Egyptian capital shows all too clearly the consequences
- of the inexorable human drive to have children. Cairo's open
- space per capita must be measured in square inches, and the
- poorest citizens build shelters on rooftops, in cemeteries and
- in the city dump. Cramped conditions are nothing new, of course,
- but even old-timers lament that population pressures are making
- Egyptians "bestial" to one another.
- </p>
- <p> Cairo is also buffeted by all the political, cultural and religious
- forces that tend to interfere with effective birth-control programs.
- Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak has worked hard, with some
- success, to curb the country's growth rate, and the government
- is proud to be hosting a conference expected to attract up to
- 20,000 participants, including several heads of state. Egypt's
- fundamentalist Muslim sheiks take a different view, however,
- drawing cheers from their followers when they denounce the meeting
- as a "Zionist and imperialist assault against Islam."
- </p>
- <p> The organizers of the conference don't see it that way, but
- they do admit that the purpose of the gathering is to bring
- about a radical shift in the world's population policies. For
- three years, representatives from 180 nations have been laying
- the groundwork at preparatory meetings, and unlike delegates
- to previous population negotiations, they invited substantial
- contributions from women's groups. The result is a tentative
- plan built around the idea that the key to curbing population
- is enhancing the status of women around the world. The plan,
- which has the support of the U.S., calls for channeling $17
- billion annually by the year 2000 into many local programs,
- including those that would give women better educational opportunities,
- easier access to family-planning services and improved health
- care. Other proposals would finance campaigns urging men to
- shoulder more responsibility for contraception, child rearing
- and even housework. Says Nafis Sadik, executive director of
- the U.N. Population Fund and the guiding force behind the conference:
- "There is a strong focus on gender equality and empowering women
- to control their lives, especially their reproductive lives."
- This approach drew immediate objections from advocates of traditional
- family planning, who were worried that a feminist agenda would
- divert money away from proven birth-control methods.
- </p>
- <p> Such language drew early and fervent protests from the Vatican,
- which sees "control their reproductive lives" as a code phrase
- calling not only for access to artificial birth-control methods
- but also for abortion on demand. When Pope John Paul II met
- with Sadik earlier this year, he delivered a message condemning
- abortion as a "heinous evil" and followed up by calling the
- proposed plan a "project of systematic death." Sadik maintains
- that the conference plan does not endorse or encourage abortion,
- but merely declares that the millions of abortions performed
- every year should be done under conditions that ensure the safety
- of the women.
- </p>
- <p> The Vatican's opposition was predictable, but not its alliance
- with many Muslim leaders. Seeking support for the Pope's stand
- against the conference, his envoys met this summer with leaders
- from several Muslim countries, including Iran and Libya. The
- envoys got cordial receptions because the followers of Islam,
- besides having rigid ideas about the role of women, generally
- disapprove of abortion. It's not clear how many nations will
- join the Catholic-Muslim opposition in Cairo, but the conference
- is sure to be a contentious affair. Particularly unsettling
- is the possibility of violent protests. Over the past two years,
- Muslim extremists in Egypt have stepped up efforts to overthrow
- Mubarak's pro-Western government, and terrorist attacks have
- killed more than 390 people, including five foreigners.
- </p>
- <p> It will be a tragedy if dissension undermines the crucial work
- of the conference: to reach some agreement on how to slow down
- the population juggernaut. The number of humans now totals 5.7
- billion, is growing by 94 million annually, and could reach
- 10 billion by the year 2050 unless population control--or
- famine, warfare and disease--intervenes. Already, population
- pressures are magnifying the human misery caused by every war,
- political upheaval or natural disaster, from Rwanda and Somalia
- to Haiti and Cuba. Relief agencies equipped to handle thousands
- of dislocated or starving people every few years must now cope
- with millions of dispossessed souls clamoring for help in several
- different places at once.
- </p>
- <p> Optimists have argued that naturally declining birthrates could
- defuse the population bomb. But the world's head count has grown
- so large that even a modest birthrate will produce huge increases.
- Consider the case of China, where a draconian birth-control
- program has reduced the country's annual population-growth rate
- to 1.4%, the same as Canada's. Since China already has 1.2 billion
- people, however, the country grows by 17 million--half a Canada--each year. Lester Brown of Washington's Worldwatch Institute
- wonders where the food will come from to feed the 300 million
- Chinese who will be added during the next 30 years. He points
- out that by the year 2030, China could consume all the surplus
- grain produced in the world today merely to meet the basic needs
- of its population.
- </p>
- <p> The implications of such grim arithmetic are not lost on anyone,
- not even the dissenters who are trying to derail the proceedings
- in Cairo. In Iran, where some officials have endorsed the Vatican's
- opposition to the conference, the government has for years pushed
- family planning. And the Vatican's own scientific advisory panel
- has warned that an unchecked tide of humanity poses a threat
- to the planet.
- </p>
- <p> But that has not prevented the Catholic-Muslim alliance from
- objecting strenuously to the U.N.'s proposed solutions. The
- Pope thinks the plan embodies a vision of sexuality that favors
- the individual over the family. "Today," he said, "it is more
- urgent than ever to react against models of behavior that are
- the fruit of a hedonistic and permissive culture." Islamic intellectual
- Mustafa Mahmoud of Egypt calls the draft plan "a well-designed
- explosive device to blow apart ((Muslim)) religious identity."
- </p>
- <p> Timothy Wirth, a U.S. Under Secretary of State and a leader
- of the American delegation going to Cairo, denies that the U.N.
- plan would impose Western values on other cultures. Argues Wirth:
- "Everything in the document is done within the framework of
- national laws, cultures and religions. The U.N. is not going
- to dictate what a culture can do."
- </p>
- <p> The delegates to Cairo appear to have two main options: approve
- the essence of the draft proposal, allowing the Vatican and
- its supporters to file dissents, or try to find some consensus
- language that papers over the conflicts, which usually happens
- with U.N. documents. The need for consensus reduces action plans
- to pallid, inoffensive wish lists that quickly disappear into
- bureaucratic oblivion after the signing ceremonies. Such was
- the outcome of the Earth Summit that convened in Rio de Janeiro
- two years ago. But continued indecisiveness on the population
- issue may be a formula for disaster. Speaking in Washington
- recently, Nobel-laureate physicist Henry Kendall of M.I.T. observed,
- "If we don't control the population with justice, humanity and
- mercy, it will be done for us by nature--brutally."
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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