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- <text id=94TT1287>
- <title>
- Sep. 26, 1994: Environment:More Power to Women
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 26, 1994 Taking Over Haiti
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 64
- More Power to Women, Fewer Mouths to Feed
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The U.N. conference reaches consensus: gender equality is a
- key to curbing population growth
- </p>
- <p>By Eugene Linden/Cairo--With reporting by Lara Marlowe/Cairo
- </p>
- <p> Sohad Ahmad, an impoverished Egyptian farmer's wife, knew nothing
- about the huge United Nations population conference going on
- 50 miles to the north, in Cairo. For her, family planning was
- not a global issue but a personal, practical matter. Getting
- a checkup last week at a health clinic in the rural town of
- Sinnuris, Ahmad laughed when a nurse asked if she was pregnant.
- "No," she replied, "we know pregnancy is an evil now." She and
- her husband, Sohad explained, had decided to stop after two
- children because of the expense of raising a large family. Ahmad's
- 20-year-old daughter Nadia also has two children, and she too
- says she wants no more. In fact, the only difference in their
- family-planning strategies is the method of contraception: injections
- of the drug Depo-Provera for the mother and an IUD for the daughter.
- </p>
- <p> That poor Egyptian women in a farming community would take action
- to limit the number of children they bear illustrates how rapidly
- attitudes about family size are changing--and not just in
- so-called developed countries but in every corner of the globe.
- Only a few years ago, the task of persuading rural populations
- to lower their birthrates was considered impossible; farmers
- presumably wanted to have many children to help work the fields.
- But as land becomes scarce, even uneducated villagers begin
- to see that having more children in an effort to grow more food
- can become self-defeating. In rich and poor nations alike, people
- acknowledge that their world is getting too crowded.
- </p>
- <p> Changing public attitudes help explain why the U.N. meeting
- in Cairo, formally known as the International Conference on
- Population and Development, ended in surprising peace and harmony,
- even though it had opened amid fierce disputes about abortion
- and threats of violence by Islamic fundamentalists. For once
- the U.N. was truly united: no country voted against the final
- draft of a 113-page plan calling on governments to commit $17
- billion annually by the year 2000 to the cause of curbing population
- growth.
- </p>
- <p> Much of the money would be headed for traditional programs designed
- to provide health-care and family-planning services for hundreds
- of millions of people who want to limit the number of their
- children but have no access to contraceptives. But more ambitious
- aspects of the plan call for efforts to give women equal participation
- in politics and public life and for initiatives to eliminate
- gender discrimination in the workplace and other forms of economic
- inequality, such as limits on a woman's ability to obtain credit,
- hold property or receive an inheritance. The premise of the
- strategy is that if women are "empowered" to control their own
- reproductive lives, they will choose to have fewer children.
- </p>
- <p> Despite intense opposition from the Roman Catholic Church, the
- document also recognizes that unsafe abortions are a public-health
- problem that should be addressed. But the plan steered clear
- of encouraging abortion as a means of family planning, and,
- in a stunning reversal, the Vatican endorsed much of the program.
- </p>
- <p> That conciliatory step may have been a response to the anger
- aroused by the Vatican's earlier attempts to rally nations against
- the meeting. The Holy See had courted fundamentalists in Iran,
- for example, but instead of bashing the West, the Islamic republic
- delighted delegates by working harmoniously to resolve differences
- over the language in the final document. Iran's Deputy Minister
- of Health, Malek Afzali, spoke proudly of his nation's aggressive
- family-planning program, which he claimed has cut Iran's population
- growth rate in half, from 3.6% a year in the early 1980s to
- 1.8% now.
- </p>
- <p> "The world has changed since the Earth Summit," said a U.S.
- delegate, referring to the 1992 Rio conference on environment
- and development, which was marred by deep distrust and finger
- pointing among participating nations. "That was just two years
- ago, and you couldn't even talk about population." In contrast,
- the unexpected consensus in Cairo left delegates bubbling about
- a "watershed in world history." Timothy Wirth, the U.S. Undersecretary
- of State for global affairs, who earned high praise for helping
- guide the initially fractious group toward agreement, called
- the consensus a rare victory for the U.N. "It's hard enough
- to get 180 members of the U.S. Congress to agree on anything,
- much less 180 nations," Wirth pointed out.
- </p>
- <p> That said, it is far from certain that the conference will have
- lasting impact. Most U.N. action programs seem to be the bureaucratic
- equivalent of Tibetan mandalas, those intricate designs of colored
- sand arduously crafted through years of work. Once completed,
- they are allowed to blow away into oblivion. Maher Mahran, Egypt's
- outspoken Population Minister, endorsed the conference for "energizing"
- governments to face a crucial issue but said he doubted that
- countries would pay attention to the specifics of the action
- plan.
- </p>
- <p> Mahran knows that his own country, which crowds 62 million people
- into a narrow strip of arable land the size of the Netherlands,
- provides a sobering reality check for the idealistic premises
- of the Cairo accord. Egypt imports 70% of its food, yet each
- year it loses thousands of acres of farmland to urban sprawl
- and overuse. The nation will somehow have to find food, water
- and jobs for an additional 37 million people over the next 30
- years.
- </p>
- <p> Faced with these dire statistics, the Egyptian government began
- to explore family planning in the early 1980s, at first cautiously
- and then with increasing boldness. In fact, the U.N. gave President
- Hosni Mubarak its 1994 population award because Egypt cut its
- growth rate from more than 3% in 1985 to just over 2% last year.
- </p>
- <p> It's useful, therefore, to see how the methods employed to slow
- growth in Egypt match up with the ones outlined in the new U.N.
- plan. In Sinnuris officials try to link family-planning services
- to health care for women and children--a combination considered
- vital by the delegates to Cairo. But Mohammed Zakaria, undersecretary
- for health affairs in Sinnuris, says he must also meet birth-control
- targets set each year (an approach deemed ineffective in the
- Cairo plan) and that after a second child, families must pay
- steep fees for hospital delivery (a disincentive generally frowned
- on as coercive). In general, women like Sohad Ahmad are limiting
- the number of their children not because of any economic or
- political empowerment but because of economic hardship.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever the practical benefits of the conference, few denied
- its symbolic importance. One delegate likened the event to an
- Alcoholics Anonymous meeting: countries drew comfort from the
- plight of other countries, and together they resolved to deal
- with the mutual problem. As this delegate saw it, "Muslim nations
- said to other Muslim nations, `It's O.K. to support family planning,'
- as did Catholic nations to other Catholic nations." Thus, the
- consensus achieved in Cairo may allow the world community to
- move beyond divisive debates about abortion and contraception
- in dealing with the population juggernaut. The accord may signal
- a new, more mature approach to confronting a potential global
- disaster.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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