Investing
in population and reproductive health
programmes for the well-being of all
27 October 2005, Suzhou,
China
As
participants in the International
Symposium on Official Development
Assistance for Population and Development,
held in Suzhou, China, from 26 to
28 October 2005, we have exchanged
experiences and best practices in
implementing assistance programmes
and explored strategies for achieving
by 2015 the goals of the 1994 International
Conference on Population Development
(ICPD) and the Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs). We come from governments,
intergovernmental organizations and
non-governmental organizations (NGOs).
We
hereby:
1.
Reaffirm our strong commitment to
the full implementation of the ICPD
Programme of Action and the MDGs.
We applaud the 2005 World Summit
Outcome, which endorsed the ICPD
goal of universal access to reproductive
health by 2015 and called for its
integration into strategies to meet
the MDGs. Without meeting these
ICPD objectives, the MDGs cannot
be achieved nor can extreme poverty
be eliminated.
2.
Note with grave concern
the severe challenges the world
faces with regard to population
and reproductive health issues,
including family planning. Millions
of people have inadequate access
or no access to quality sexual and
reproductive health services and
information, and hence cannot enjoy
their right to sexual and reproductive
health. This results in many unwanted
pregnancies and unsafe abortions,
and contributes to high maternal
and infant mortality and birth rates,
especially in the poorest countries.
3.
Affirm that official development
assistance (ODA) has played a key
role in achieving important progress
since the ICPD, but note with concern
that ODA for population and development
is well below the levels the ICPD
agreed would be needed to meet its
goals. We note that the rapid spread
of HIV/AIDS, which had not been
anticipated in the ICPD funding
estimates, has compounded the need
for additional financial resources.
A substantial increase in ODA is
therefore needed to meet the goals
of the ICPD and the MDGs.
4.
Reiterate that governments
bear the major responsibility for
implementing the ICPD Programme
of Action and the strategies to
attain the MDGs; that civil society,
including NGOs, has an essential
role to play; and that international
cooperation is also very important,
especially South-South cooperation.
We
recognize that:
5.
We live in a world of increasing
interdependence. Although globalization
brings many opportunities, its benefits
have been unevenly distributed.
Gaps between rich and poor, between
developed and developing countries,
and between different regions within
countries continue to grow. Over
one billion people still live in
extreme poverty. Slow and uneven
development in many developing countries
and countries in economic transition
undermine efforts to address poverty
and achieve the MDGs.
6.
Development is a process
for realizing human potential, raising
living standards, and ensuring that
every person lives a life of dignity.
Human beings are central to sustainable
development; priority must be given
to investment in human capital,
particularly in education and health
services. The right to development
is universal and indispensable.
7.
Gender equality and the
empowerment of women are essential
to achieving sustainable development.
Persistent poverty, discrimination,
gender-based violence and inadequate
reproductive health care impede
women’s advancement and progress
towards gender equality.
8.
Reproductive health is
an essential component of overall
health and a human rights imperative.
Investing in better reproductive
health benefits individuals, families
and society as a whole, and is critical
to enhancing the quality of life
and achieving sustainable development.
We
emphasize that:
9.
Governments bear the principal
responsibility for development.
They must make every effort to mobilize
sufficient national resources, including
those of the private sector, for
investment in education and health;
and they must ensure that all citizens,
including the poor, share in the
benefits of development.
10.
The international community
should provide, and also encourage
the allocation of, more resources
to address issues such as population,
health, education, women’s
advancement and the well-being of
children and the elderly.
11.
Development assistance
should be consistent with developing
countries’ own priorities,
and should help build national capacity
and self-reliance in formulating
and implementing population and
development strategies.
12.
Programmes for population
and development should pay due attention
to the diverse cultures, values,
traditions and religious beliefs
of each country and be in full conformity
with internationally accepted human
rights.
13.
Building human capacity
and enhancing people’s well-being
should be the ultimate goal of development
assistance and the main criteria
for evaluating ODA programmes.
14.
Greater investment in sexual
and reproductive health information
and services, including family planning,
is imperative to ensure: (a) people’s
human right to attain the highest
standard of sexual and reproductive
health; and (b) the basic right
of all couples and individuals to
decide freely and responsibly the
number, spacing and timing of their
children and to have the information
and means to do so. Recent research
confirms the inextricable link between
improved sexual and reproductive
health and the achievement of the
MDGs. The latter will not be achieved
unless universal access to reproductive
health services becomes a reality,
as noted in the 2005 World Summit
Outcome.
15. To promote
gender equality, resources for women’s
programmes need to be increased.
At the same time, serious efforts
must be made to: challenge traditional
concepts about gender roles; raise
women’s awareness of their
rights and their potential for self-development;
address gender-based violence; and
promote women’s equal participation
in managing family, community and
state affairs, at all stages of
decision-making and implementation.
Governments should incorporate women’s
empowerment and gender equality
concerns into the criteria for formulating
and evaluating social development
programmes.
16.
Development must advance
social justice. National strategies
and assistance programmes should
aim to ensure equitable development
that reaches vulnerable groups such
as women, children, the elderly
and migrants. Programmes should
empower such groups, increase their
capacity for decision-making and
self-management, guarantee their
access to equal services without
discrimination, and ensure their
participation in formulating, implementing
and supervising social policies.
17.
Combating the HIV/AIDS
pandemic requires concerted efforts,
based on a balanced strategy consisting
of prevention, treatment and care,
by governments all over the world.
Policies and programmes should reflect
the close linkages between HIV/AIDS
and sexual and reproductive health,
and their interrelationship with
broader issues of public health,
development and human rights. This
requires the integration of HIV/AIDS
policies and programmes into reproductive
health policies and programmes.
18.
Investments in the health
and education of adolescents and
young people are critical to meeting
the MDGs. Adolescents need access
to appropriate reproductive health
information, counselling and youth
friendly services, respecting their
rights to confidentiality and informed
consent, and respecting their cultural
values and religious beliefs, with
due respect to the rights, duties
and responsibilities of their parents
and in a manner consistent with
their evolving capacities. Adolescents
should become more active participants
in planning and implementing activities
that address their sexual and reproductive
health needs and rights.
19.
The international response
to humanitarian crises such as wars
and natural disasters should ensure
that refugees and displaced populations
have access to reproductive health
services for safe motherhood, family
planning and the prevention of sexually
transmitted infections, including
HIV, and that they are protected
against sexual and other gender
based violence.
We
urge:
20.
Member States of the United
Nations and the Secretary-General
of the United Nations to use the
ICPD goal of universal access to
reproductive health by 2015 as a
target to monitor the implementation
of the MDGs on improving maternal
health; on promoting gender equality
and empowering women; and on combating
HIV/AIDS, as a follow-up to the
clear commitment of the 2005 World
Summit to achieve the ICPD goal
by 2015 and achieve the MDGs.
21.
All countries to allocate
adequate resources to enable the
achievement of the goal of reproductive
health for all by 2015.
22.
Developed countries to
increase substantially their ODA
in the areas of population and development,
and to fulfil their commitments
to provide ODA at a level equivalent
to at least 0.7 per cent of their
gross national product and to direct
at least 4 per cent of their ODA
to population and reproductive health
by 2015. Developed countries should
also help developing countries acquire
the technology and human capacity
needed to achieve universal access
to reproductive health and the MDGs
by 2015, including reproductive
health commodity sufficiency and
supply security.
23.
Developing countries to
maximize returns on both ODA and
national funds invested in reproductive
health information and services,
by promoting good governance and
learning from the experience of
other countries. We urge developing
countries to devote no less than
4 per cent of their national health
budgets to reproductive health services
and information, and to include
in their national budgets a line
item for reproductive health, including
reproductive health commodities.
24. All countries
to promote greater South-South cooperation
in the areas of population and development.
Increased financial and technical
support, including support from
developing countries in a position
to do so, is needed for training,
reproductive health commodity exchanges
and the sharing of experience and
information on programme mechanisms
and standard setting.
25.
Partnerships among governments,
NGOs and the private sector, which
are essential to meeting development
goals. Governments and intergovernmental
organizations should recognize the
comparative advantages of NGOs,
particularly in sexual and reproductive
health work, where for many years
they have carried a disproportionate
share of the delivery burden, and
involve them in formulating, implementing,
monitoring and assessing programmes
related to population and development.
For true sustainability, programmes
must be owned by clients and respond
to their needs.
26.
All partners, including developing
and developed country governments,
national and international NGOs,
the business sector, communities,
families and individuals to join
an effective global alliance to
ensure universal access to reproductive
health services by 2015 and the
achievement of the MDGs.
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