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The Global Gag Rule was
reinstated by President George W. Bush on his first day in office in
January 2001. Officially termed the Mexico City Policy, these restrictions
mandate that no U.S. family planning assistance can be provided to foreign
NGOs that use funding from any other source to: perform abortions in
cases other than a threat to the woman’s life, rape or incest;
provide counseling and referral for abortion; or lobby to make abortion
legal or more available in their country.
Called the "gag" rule
because it stifles free speech and public debate on abortion-related issues, the policy forces a cruel choice on foreign
NGOs: accept U.S. assistance to provide essential health services – but
with restrictions that may jeopardize the health of many patients – or
reject the policy and lose vital U.S. funds, contraceptive supplies and technical assistance.
Our continuing research shows the gag rule is eroding family planning
and reproductive health services in developing countries. There is no
evidence that it has reduced the incidence of abortion globally. On the
contrary, it impedes the very services that help women avoid unwanted
pregnancy from the start.
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