Trump administration vastly expands
global anti-abortion policy
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[May 16, 2017]
By Yeganeh Torbati
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Trump
administration said on Monday it was vastly expanding the scope of a
policy blocking U.S. assistance to foreign groups that perform or
provide information about abortions, a move critics say will hinder
women's access to critical care.
The new policy means that $8.8 billion in U.S. assistance to an array of
programs fighting HIV/AIDS, malaria and maternal and child health will
be subject to the so-called Mexico City policy.
The policy, introduced in 1984, holds that no U.S. government funding
for family planning services can be given to foreign clinics or groups
that offer abortion services or discuss abortion, even if the funds for
those activities come from non-U.S. government sources.
The policy previously applied to a much narrower stream of about $600
million in U.S. government funds.
Since it was unveiled, the Mexico City rule has been routinely rescinded
under Democratic administrations and reinstated under Republican ones,
and is used by presidents to signal where they stand on abortion rights.
Critics of the policy call it the "global gag rule," and say it hurts
vulnerable women worldwide who depend on aid groups for their
healthcare. Even when the Mexico City policy is not in place, federal
law prevents the use of U.S. funding for abortions abroad.
President Donald Trump, a Republican, reinstated the policy in January,
just days after taking office, but he went further and directed
government agencies to figure out a plan to apply the policy "to global
health assistance furnished by all departments or agencies."
U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has approved a plan to expand the
policy's provisions to funding for HIV/AIDS, maternal and child health,
malaria and other health programs, the State Department said on Monday.
That includes about $6 billion in funding for the President's Emergency
Plan for AIDS Relief, or PEPFAR, the world's largest provider of
AIDS-fighting medicine. PEPFAR, launched in 2003 during Republican
President George W. Bush's administration, has been credited with saving
millions of lives and enjoys bipartisan support.
Other programs affected by the expanded policy, called "Protecting Life
in Global Health Assistance," include the President's Malaria
Initiative, which received about $621 million in funding in 2016,
according to its website.
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President Donald Trump speaks at the National Peace Officers
Memorial Service on the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol in Washington,
U.S., May 15, 2017. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
OVERALL AID LEVEL UNCHANGED
The State Department said in a statement: "Protecting Life in Global
Health Assistance does not reduce the amount of global health
assistance the U.S. Government makes available, and funding
previously obligated will not be affected as a result of this
policy."
U.S. officials said the malaria and HIV/AIDS programs would be
resilient even if the United States had to deny funding to existing
healthcare providers.
"We have a diversity of partners who are providing services and that
would be available to continue those services," a senior
administration official told reporters on condition of anonymity.
The new policy applies to funds provided to foreign non-governmental
organizations, but not to aid provided to governments or
multilateral organizations, the State Department said. The expanded
policy also does not apply to humanitarian assistance and disaster
relief or to U.N. funds and programs.
Democratic Senator Jeanne Shaheen, who sits on the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, said the expanded policy would have "severe
consequences for millions of vulnerable women and children."
Anti-abortion groups praised the decision, saying it merely
represented a realignment of funding.
(Reporting by Yeganeh Torbati; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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