PRIs Weekly Briefing Vol. 4 / No. 8 April 25, 2002UNFPA's Leaky Condoms Poke Holes In Colin Powell's Safe Sex Theory
By Steve Mosher
A shipment of ten million defective
condoms from the United
Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) has been seized by the Tanzanian government at the port of
Dar es Salaam.(1) The UNFPA
condoms failed permeability tests carried
out by the Tanzanian Bureau of Standards (in plain English, they leak), and the government
has confirmed that they will be destroyed.
UNFPA has long promoted condom use in Africa to stop the spread of AIDS which, according
to the UNFPA's own estimates, has already infected "close to 15 per cent of persons
aged 15-49" in Tanzania.(2) The discovery of a huge cache of leaky
condoms raises new concerns not only about the device itself, but about the U.N.
population control agency that bought and paid for them. After all, leaky
condoms would
not only offer no protection against HIV/AIDS, they would actually contribute to its
spread by creating a false sense of security about risky sexual activity.
If ten million UNFPA
condoms were found by the Tanzanian government to be defective, how
many tens of millions of leaky UNFPA
condoms have been distributed around the world, to
other countries in Africa, or to Tanzania in the past? Is UNFPA, by failing to ensure that
its condoms don't leak, actually contributing to the spread of HIV/AIDS?
Whatever the cause of the defects, there are some in the population control movement who
will not mourn the loss of life that leaky
condoms will cause. After all, they believe as
an article of faith that there are too many people in the world, and that our numbers must
be reduced.
Recall in this context that in 1999 UNFPA representative Fran Jansen said that AIDS was
helping to do the work of population control in Africa.(3) Reports of
UNFPAs leaky condoms reached Washington just as U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell
was publicly endorsing their use before the Senate Foreign Operations Subcommittee.
"Im also a believer in protecting ones self" with
condoms," he
said. "And you may have noticed I got in a little trouble recently over this
issue," Powell joked to Senate Democrats, harkening back to statements made on MTV
last February. "[B]ut thats all right."(4)
Condoms,
however--defective or otherwise--which contribute to the spread of HIV/AIDS and STDs are
not "all right" with the people of the developing world.
This new scandal comes at a time when the beleaguered U.N. agency has been under attack
for collaborating with China's one-child policy. U.S. funding for the agency has been held
up by President Bush, leading UNFPA to complain that it was having to cut staff and shelve
programs. Since the cost of the boatload of leaky
condoms is $870,000 U.S., according to
the UNFPA itself, that agency has just wasted the better part of a million dollars.
Despite its continuing problems with China, coercion and
condoms, U.S. Deputy Secretary of
State Richard Armitage defended UNFPA before Congress this week.
(5)
A Third Coat of Whitewash
To the House Foreign Operations subcommittee, Armitage cited an April 2002 junket
to China organized by UNFPA and the Labor government of Britain, carried out with the
foreknowledge, consent, and support of the communist government of the Peoples
Republic of China. The British delegation, said Armitage, "came back with actually
very positive things to say" about UNFPA operations in China.(6)
How could it be otherwise, we ask, with Chinese officials stage-managing the whole show.
With Chinese officials present, the Chinese women interviewed all parroted identical
statements. Still, despite the fact that the Chinese translator was a UNFPA employee, the
British did manage to confirm that people are coerced to meet targets.
This latest whitewash of the UNFPA's China program was similar to the UNFPAs own
earlier whitewash, carried out under the guise of an "independent
investigation." UNFPA official, Nicolaas Biegman, later confessed to a Senate
Subcommittee that, during his October 2001 visit to China, Chinese officials had never
left his side, even for sensitive interviews with women about forced abortions and forced
sterilizations.(7)
At that hearing, U.S. Senator Sam Brownback (R-KS) pointed out that federal law is very
clear on the issue of forced abortion and non-voluntary sterilization programs abroad. The
U.S. government may not fund groups that support these abuses.
Last September, PRI obtained first hand testimonies in China from victims of forced
abortion in UNFPAs model county program in China. Over two dozen victims and
witnesses of coercion testified that voluntary family planning does not exist in this
program. Abuses of forced abortion and sterilization, destruction of homes with
jackhammers, imprisonment and fines for non-compliance are "recent, rampant and
unrelenting."(8)
Armitage went on to tell Congress that the State Department was preparing to send its own
investigators to China for two weeks, "after which a report should be issued."(9) Anticipating a finding favorable to the UNFPA, Armitage said: "I
am very hopeful that they will come back very rapidly and allow us to spend I think
the language was not to exceed $34 million for UNFPA activities."
A third coat of whitewash would seem to be in the works, this one to be slapped on by the
U.S. State Department.
ENDNOTES
-
"Shipment of 10 Million
Condoms
Blocked," Africa News Service, April 23, 2002.
-
"Recommendation by the Executive
Director Assistance to the Government of the United Republic of Tanzania," Executive
Board of the United Nations Development Program and of the United Nations Population Fund,
January 28 February 8, 2002;
http://www.unfpa.org/regions/africa/countries/tanzania/
1tan0206.doc.
-
"UNFPA Briefing Makes Light of
High Mortality in Africa," C-FAM, Friday Fax, Vol. 2, Number 29, October 15, 1999.
-
Senate Appropriations Foreign
Operations Subcommittee, April 24, 2002.
-
"U.N. Agency on Population Blames
U.S. For Cutbacks," The New York Times, April 7 2002.
-
House Appropriations Foreign Operations
Subcommittee, April 18, 2002.
-
Senate Appropriations Foreign
Operations Subcommittee, February 27, 2002.
-
Ibid., Testimony of Ms. Josephine Guy,
PRIs lead investigator in China.
-
House Appropriations Foreign Operations
Subcommittee.
_________________________
Steve Mosher is the president of Population Research Institute, a non-profit organization
dedicated to ending human rights abuses committed in the name of "family
planning," and to ending counter-productive social and economic paradigms premised on
the myth of "overpopulation."
© 2002 Population Research Institute. Permission to reprint granted.
Redistribute widely. Credit required.
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