CATHOLIC
AND AFRICAN OPPOSITION
Catholic
and African Leaders Oppose the Maputo Protocol
Pope
Benedict XVI himself said on January 8, 2007 in an address to the diplomatic
corps accredited to the Holy See:
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“How
can we not be alarmed, moreover, by the continuous attacks on
life, from conception to natural death? Such attacks do not
even spare regions with a traditional culture of respecting
life, such as Africa, where there is an attempt to trivialize
abortion surreptitiously, both through the Maputo Protocol and
through the Plan of Action adopted by the health ministers of
the African Union --shortly to be submitted to the Summit of
Heads of State and Heads of Government.”
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On
April 19, 2007, a joint statement was released by many prominent African
bishops:
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“We
would like to draw the attention of the political leaders of
Africa to our strong reservations concerning some aspects of
Article 14 of the Maputo Protocol.…We observe that the
rights of women to protect and promote their sexual and reproductive
health in this article exclude the rights of the couple, the
family and the larger society (civil, traditional, cultural
and religious) from playing a part in promoting precisely the
women’s rights to their health care. For instance, the
authorization to have recourse to abortion and the choice of
any method of contraception by the women (cf. Article 14, #
1, c and # 2, c) are particularly incompatible with our Catholic
Church teaching, tradition and practice…. Additionally,
the Church has continually affirmed since the first century
that it is a moral evil for any person or agent to procure an
abortion. This teaching has not changed and remains unchangeable….
In the light of this, we observe that abortion and infanticide
are abominable crimes to almost all of our African cultures,
traditional societies and religions.”
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The
statement was signed by Cardinal Polycarp Pengo, President of the Symposium
of Episcopal Conferences of Africa and Madagascar (SECAM) and Archbishop
of Dar-Es-Salaam, Tanzania, and many other cardinals and bishops of
Africa.
The
Ugandan Catholic Bishops Conference said in a statement on Jan. 19,
2006:
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"Never
before has an international protocol gone so far! We believe
strongly that the people of Africa have no wish to see such
a protocol introduced into their laws. We are sure the people
of Uganda would never wish it…. The situations of severe
distress mentioned by the text of the protocol (rape, incest,
sexual assault) cannot create the right to suppress an innocent
life. This applies even less to a much less well-defined ‘danger
to the mental and physical health of the mother or the life
of the mother or the life of the foetus’ which, as matter
of fact, is the open door to abortion on demand."
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US
congressman Chris Smith visited Nigeria recently and criticized the
Protocol. According to the Daily Champion of Lagos, Feb. 26,
2007, Smith said:
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"The
lives of countless Africans have been lost or harmed by war,
crime, famine or disease and abortion, legal and illegal threatens
to destroy the next generation of African children…. It
is false to claim that abortion will be safe if it is legal.
Abortion is never safe for the child and can harm the woman
physically, emotionally and psychologically whether legal or
illegal."
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The Promoters
of the Maputo Protocol Include Radical Leftists. The Western
organizers of the promotion of the Maputo Protocol are radically left-wing.
Taking the lead has been Emma Bonino, Member of the European Parliament
and a founder of the group No Peace Without Justice. Bonino is a member
of the Radical Party in Italy. On the Radical Party’s website,
under a link called “Anticlericalism,” pictures of a demonstration
by Radical Party members in St. Peter’s Square are proudly posted.
One protest sign says, “No Vatican No Taliban.” Another
says, “No God. Atheism and Liberty.” One of the projects
on its website calls itself, “No to Vatican interference on internal
affairs of EU and member states on GLBT rights.” (GLBT stands
for gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered) The Radical Party also
boasts of its role in promoting abortion and divorce in Italy.
Furthermore,
the Maputo Plan of Action, adopted in September 2006 by African health
ministers, calls for “Universal Access to Comprehensive Sexual
and Reproductive Health Services in Africa” and wants abortion
fully provided in every African country as far as national laws allow.
When the Maputo Protocol abolishes abortion restrictions, this plan
of action will be used to expand abortion at government expense.
Africa Is
Not Overpopulated. The assumption often used to promote the
Maputo Protocol and other such ideological plans is the overpopulation
of Africa. It is assumed that there are too many black people, and that
the wealthy nations of the world must work to reduce their numbers in
cooperation with African governments. This is not true. Although many
African nations have high birthrates, they sadly also have wars, famines,
epidemics and rapidly declining fertility rates. We must also remember
that the scourge of HIV/AIDS alone will continue to claim tens of millions
of lives. Population projections for Africa usually assume that the
AIDS pandemic will be brought under control quickly, a questionable
assumption. According to the United Nations Population Division, Africa’s
population density in 2005 was 30 people per square kilometer. That
of Europe, including Russia, was 32. The sparsely populated United States
had 31 people per square kilometer and Latin America and the Caribbean,
27. Asia is increasingly prosperous and had 124. Africa is a land of
tremendous natural resources that would be wealthy if it did not suffer
from political and economic exploitation. The Maputo Protocol is another
example of wholesale social engineering imposed on Africa.
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