Press Release

Decline in Family Planning Funding Must Be Reversed, Says UNFPA

03 April 2006

UNITED NATIONS, New York — More funding for international family planning is needed urgently to enable 200 million women in developing countries to exercise their human right to determine the size of their families. Without these services, the numbers of unwanted pregnancies and abortions will continue rising and the lives of women and children as well as the Millennium Development Goals would be put at risk, according to Thoraya Ahmed Obaid, Executive Director of UNFPA, the United Nations Population Fund.

Speaking today at the United Nations Commission on Population and Development, Ms. Obaid said that, even though donor assistance to population issues has doubled in the past five years, “funding for international family planning has dropped from more than half of all spending on population assistance to less than 10 per cent.” This slide occurred between 1995 and 2004.

Despite the general increase in overall population assistance, Ms. Obaid warned that its current level was insufficient for today’s needs. Also, the majority of resources are mobilized by a few major donors, with a pronounced shift towards funding for HIV/AIDS at the expense of other vital population work, such as family planning.

Financing for population issues affects international migration flows, said Ms. Obaid. “Today, the highest unmet need for family planning is in sub-Saharan Africa, where one in four married women wants to use family planning, but has no access to these services.” These, she noted, “are the same countries with the highest rates of poverty and population growth, factors that often lead people to migrate”.

Women comprise almost half of the world’s international migrants, said Ms. Obaid, and many of them risk gender discrimination, violence, and abuse, or, in the worst cases, fall victims of ruthless traffickers. This creates “an urgent need to integrate gender and human rights into migration policies and for nations to work together to curb trafficking and bring traffickers to justice.”

Ms. Obaid also noted the severe shortage in many countries of health workers who have migrated to industrialized nations, which is “particularly devastating for countries most affected by HIV/AIDS.” Receiving countries can help by directing parts of their development assistance towards education and training in general, and health sector workers in particular, in countries from which they draw migrants.

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UNFPA, the United Nations Population Fund, is an international development agency that promotes the right of every woman, man and child to enjoy a life of health and equal opportunity. UNFPA supports countries in using population data for policies and programmes to reduce poverty and to ensure that every pregnancy is wanted, every birth is safe, every young person is free of HIV/AIDS, and every girl and woman is treated with dignity and respect.

Contact Information:

Abubakar Dungus
Tel.: +1 (212) 297-5031
Email: dungus@unfpa.org

Omar Gharzeddine
Tel.: +1 (212) 297-5028
Email: gharzeddine@unfpa.org  

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