Trump Administration Declares Abortion is "NOT a Human Right"
During a briefing last Friday on the release of a State Department report on human rights around the world, a reporter asked Michael G. Kozak, an ambassador with the department's Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor, why a section on "women's reproductive rights" had been removed from a list of American values. The language had been added under President Barack Obama.
Kozak explained that the language was originally meant to refer only to contraception access, and that it was recognized as such at the time. But since then "groups on both sides of that issue domestically have started to use the term," he said, "and both seem to think it does include abortion and then argue about it."
So the report's authors decided to instead use "the term that's used in the U.S. statute that requires the Human Rights Report, which is coerced family planning, namely coerced abortion or involuntary sterilization." He noted that these remain very real problems in China, North Korea, and Belarus, among other countries.
Kozak further said he reviewed the previous year's report and found contraception access to be a non-issue. "The answer in virtually every country was no, there were no obstacles other than, in almost every country, including our own, the availability in rural areas is less than it is in urban areas," he said. "But we were taking a lot of space to explain that."
Kozak further said he reviewed the previous year's report and found contraception access to be a non-issue. "The answer in virtually every country was no, there were no obstacles other than, in almost every country, including our own, the availability in rural areas is less than it is in urban areas," he said. "But we were taking a lot of space to explain that."
In response to another question, Kozak stressed that under the past several administrations his office has "never taken the position that abortion was . . . a human right under international law." The scope of the report is limited to "internationally recognized human rights," so he said it would be improper to use it to take sides between countries that permit abortion and those that prohibit it.
"We don't report on it because it's not a human right," Kozak said. "It's an issue of great policy debate. You can have a good discussion, but there's no internationally recognized standard as to what's the right treatment." So far, the U.S. and several African nations have managed to prevent the UN from officially enshrining abortion as an international human right.
"We don't report on it because it's not a human right," Kozak said. "It's an issue of great policy debate. You can have a good discussion, but there's no internationally recognized standard as to what's the right treatment." So far, the U.S. and several African nations have managed to prevent the UN from officially enshrining abortion as an international human right.
- Father God, we rejoice today at this GOOD REPORT coming out of the Trump administration and the State Department. We ask that You would continue to strengthen those who are defending LIFE at the global level, and we ask that You cause the voices of opposition to this policy to be silenced. In Your Name, amen.
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