After 9/11 No One Can Live Safe Inside a Fortress, Says Brazilian IPPF Director

Universal access to sexual and reproductive health services can help eliminate the poverty cycle, promote economic growth, and diminish economic and social inequalities among countries.

This is one of the recommendations of the Brasí­lia Declaration, a document drafted yesterday, August 4, by representatives of 16 Latin American and Caribbean countries that participated in the Sub-Regional Forum on the Development Goals of the Millenium, in Brasí­lia.


The document also stipulates that universal access to information and youth education constitute “arms” that countries possess to check the advance of sexually transmitted diseases, including AIDS.


For the regional director of the International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF), Carmem Barroso, political will is needed for the eight goals of the millenium to be fulfilled by 2015.


They are elimination of hunger and extreme poverty; quality basic education for all; gender equality and protection of women’s rights; reduction of infant mortality; improved health care for pregnant women; actions to combat AIDS, malaria, and other diseases; environmental sustainability; and a global partnership for development.


Barroso urges the rich countries to provide the required support and technical cooperation for developing countries to wage the battle against diseases like AIDS.


“Today we know that the world is globalized and that isolated threats no longer exist. Since the episode of September, 2001, the illusion that a fortress could be built in which the rich could live happily ever after, removed from the rest of the world’s problems, has been shattered, when, in fact, these problems are crossing frontiers and represent everybody’s problems,” she affirms.


The Brasí­lia Declaration also warns that abortions performed in risky settings have a negative impact on countries’ levels of poverty. This practice causes the death of 4 million women annually in Latin America.


The Brasí­lia Declaration will be submitted to the United Nations (UN) Summit Meeting, at the UN General Assembly session scheduled for September, in New York.


The meeting will discuss the progress made by the countries that committed themselves to the Development Goals of the Millenium in 2000.


Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

How to Beat Fraud and Still Make Money Doing Business in Brazil

As more companies are expanding their operations and staking claim in the Latin American ...

Brazil: Brasí­lia Declaration Defends Falklands Talks

One of the issues mentioned in the BrasÀ­lia Declaration, document with the conclusions of ...

How to fabricate racism

In the end, sometimes not even a line of the original dispatch survived. But ...

Brazil Ready to Stay 10 Years in Haiti

Brazilian General Augusto Heleno Ribeiro, commander of the United Nations Peace Forces in Haiti, ...

Lula: Despite Higher Primary Surplus Brazil Remains on Track

The government has decided to raise its primary account surplus target from 4.25% of ...

Brazil’s Amazon Rainforest Policy Is a One-Way Road to Disaster

Depletion of the Amazon Rainforest is not a new concern facing environmentalists, biologists, ecologists, ...

Brazil’s First Female Chief Justice to Speak at US Law Schools Annual Meeting

Brazilian Chief Justice Ellen Gracie Northfleet and American justice Sandra Day O'Connor will speak ...

Number of Cosmetics Factories Grow 8.7% in Brazil

A study by the Brazilian Association of Toiletries, Perfumes & Cosmetics Industries (Abihpec) indicates ...

Brazilian Indians: What FUNAI Won’t Tell You

Tours with visits to Indian villages are common in the Brazilian Amazon. Within the ...

Brazil: Sí£o Paulo Cattle Free of Foot and Mouth Disease, Say Authorities

The 2069 head of cattle in the state of São Paulo from regions close ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`