US Health advocates in Africa worry Trump will reimpose abortion ‘gag rule’ governing US aid - The gag rule has a 40-year history of being applied by Republican presidents and rescinded by Democratic presidents.

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Carrying her infant daughter, 19-year-old Sithulisiwe Moyo waited two hours to get birth-control pills from a tent pitched in a poor settlement on the outskirts of Zimbabwe’s capital, Harare.

The outreach clinic in Epworth provides Moyo with her best shot at achieving her dream of returning to school. “I am too young to be a baby-making machine,” she said. “At least this clinic helps me avoid another pregnancy.”

But the free service funded by the U.S. government, the world’s largest health donor, might soon be unavailable.

As he did in his first term, U.S President-elect Donald Trump is likely in January to invoke the so-called global gag rule, a policy that bars U.S. foreign aid from being used to perform abortions or provide abortion information. The policy cuts off American government funding for services that women around the world rely on to avoid pregnancy or to space out their children, as well as for heath care unrelated to abortion.

Four decades of on-again, off-again restrictions​

The gag rule has a 40-year history of being applied by Republican presidents and rescinded by Democratic presidents. Every GOP president since the mid-1980s has invoked the rule, which is known as the Mexico City Policy for the city where it was first announced.

As one of his first acts as president in 2017, Trump expanded the rule to the extent that foreign NGOs were cut off from about $600 million in U.S. family planning funds and more than $11 billion in U.S. global health aid between 2017 and 2018 alone, according to the U.S. Government Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress.

The money — much of it intended for Africa — covered efforts such as preventing malaria and tuberculosis, providing water and sanitation, and distributing health information and contraception, which might also have repercussions for HIV prevention.

Women’s health advocates are “uneasy” following Trump’s victory, said Pester Siraha, director of Population Services Zimbabwe, an affiliate of MSI Reproductive Choices, an NGO that supports abortion rights in 36 countries.

The policy stipulates that foreign NGOs that receive U.S government funding must agree to stop abortion-related activities, including discussing it as a family planning option — even when they are using non-U.S. government funds for such activities. During Trump’s first term, MSI did not agree to those conditions, effectively making it ineligible for U.S government funding.

Siraha said that a blueprint offered to Trump by the conservative-leaning Heritage Foundation in its plan known as Project 2025 indicates that the new administration could enact “a more comprehensive global gag rule.”

Even NGOs in countries that outlaw abortion, such as Zimbabwe, are affected. Population Services Zimbabwe, for instance, closed its outreach clinics during Trump’s first term after losing funding due to its association with MSI Reproductive Choices. Such outreach clinics are often the only health care option for rural people with limited access to hospitals due to poverty or distance.

“It leaves women with no place to turn for help, even for information,” said Whitney Chinogwenya, global marketing manager at MSI Reproductive Choices.
Some NGOs in other African countries such as Uganda, Ghana, Ethiopia, Kenya and South Africa rolled back services, including clinics, contraception, training and support for government and community health workers, as well as programs for young people, sex workers and LGBTIQ+ communities.

Other services shut down entirely. The risk of unplanned pregnancies, unsafe abortions and related deaths increased in many of the affected countries, according to the U.S.-based Guttmacher Institute, which supports abortion rights.

Chinogwenya, the MSI Reproductive Choices marketing manager, said her organization’s donor income dropped by $120 million during Trump’s first term. The money would have provided 8 million women globally with family planning help, preventing 6 million unintended pregnancies, 1.8 million unsafe abortions and 20,000 pregnancy-related deaths, she said.

The gag-rule policy “leads to more unintended, unwanted, unsupportable pregnancies and therefore an increase in abortion,” said Catriona Macleod, a professor of psychology at South Africa’s Rhodes University.

“This legislation does not protect life … it’s been called America’s deadly export,” said Macleod, who heads the university’s studies in sexuality and reproduction.
Trump’s transition team did not respond to a request for comment from The Associated Press.

Damage isn’t always easy to repair​

President Joe Biden rescinded the gag-rule policy in 2021, resulting in Population Services Zimbabwe receiving $9 million, about 50% of its donor funding, from USAID in 2023. “But we haven’t regained all the loss we suffered,” said Siraha, the organization’s director.

“You need a minimum of five years to have an impact. If we then have another gap of five years, it means we are reversing all the gains,” she said.

Her organization estimates that 1.3 million women could lose out on the care they need in Zimbabwe, leading to an additional 461,000 unintended pregnancies and 1,400 maternal deaths if the gag rule is reinstated.

Overseas aid budget cuts by other Western governments will make it harder to find alternative funding, Siraha said.

Forced into difficult choices​

MSI Reproductive Choices is lobbying world leaders and alternative donors to fight for abortion rights.

“Trump’s reelection may embolden the anti-choice movement, but the fight for women’s reproductive rights is nonnegotiable,” Chinogwenya said.

However, agencies that rely heavily or entirely on U.S funding might have little choice but “to quiet their guidelines on access to abortion” to qualify for funding, said Denise Horn, an international relations and civil society expert at Bryant University in Rhode Island.

In South Africa, where abortion is mostly legal, some NGOs, especially those without alternative funding, stopped openly discussing abortion as an option or changed their guidelines and the information they share publicly, according to an assessment by South Africa’s Rhodes University and the International Women’s Health Coalition, a New York-based NGO.

“Organizations thus have to evaluate what is most important: the non-abortion work they will still be able to do or the principle of pro-choice,” read part of the 2019 assessment report. “Ultimately, these organizations will have to make this difficult decision.”

The long lines of women at the outreach clinic in Zimbabwe’s Epworth settlement underline the dire need for family planning services in impoverished communities.

Engeline Mukanya, 30, said she is already struggling to support her three children with the $100 she earns monthly from plaiting women’s hair. Nurses inserted a birth-control implant in her left arm to protect her from pregnancy for the next five years.

Like many here, she cannot afford private providers who charge $20 to $60.

“It’s unfortunate that we are so far away from America yet we are being caught in the crossfire of its politics,” she said. “All we want is the freedom to space our births.”

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While I agree with the first part, the problem with this is that it fails to convey to women that if they don't want to be pregnant, they have to stop having sex. However most women, nearly 99% of all women, use sex as a means to further their economic and social status, so I won't hold my breath.
Because men see it as a pure women's issue. But then think they have a say when it comes to abortions. Either men take responsibility and only have sex when 1. they want a child or 2. the man uses proper protection, or, they keep doing what they do and stfu about women wanting an abortion. It has been a issue for decades that all men just want sex but want 0 responsibility! They push taking care of protection during sex, dealing with pregnancy and being aware of STDs onto women and don't care about what they do. Didn't gay men spread AIDS because they care as little about protection as straight men? I notice a pattern....

Edit: not a single straight man on this planet will say: "let's not have sex tonight, I don't have any protection with me and I don't want to risk getting you pregnant". Instead men expect that women take care of protection and don't waste a single thought on it. If the woman he had sex with gets pregnant, he says "why don't you use protection?", "why aren't you taking the pill?", "it's your issue, not my problem, deal with it and leave me out of it" and the number 1 used moid sentence "close your legs". That's the same type of man marching on the street, protesting abortion rights.

This issue will persist until men start acting like adults and take responsibility.

Moids are moiding 😌 very brave
 
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In this thread, we learn that African nations, overnight, have completely abolished such practices as bride sale, child brides, mass rape as a tool of warfare, and rape generally; thereby meaning all African women are now completely in control of their own reproduction by 'closing their legs' and 'just saying no'.
But that's what westoid abortion propaganda says. There's no difference between US and African messaging, same "me / my daughter deserves to be a cumsock".

There are two African women quoted in the article and neither sounds like she's a victim. Can Moyo return to school if she's getting raped daily? What about Engeline (age 30)'s three children, aren't they in danger from whoever enslaved her?

Instead, the goal of the program is "spacing out children". Spacing out rapists' children?

Or maybe it's actually about the "right" to keep legs wide open:
programs for young people, sex workers and LGBTIQ+ communities.
 
‘Close your legs’ might work in the west but come on, this is Africa. Married women have no choice about it, if men won’t use protection they’re getting pregnant.
But this article is a bait and switch. It starts off with the reasonable case - a presumably married woman who wants to space her children. Then it admits that the NGOs are pushing abortion and buttsex.
Relying on overseas NGOs for critical aspects of healthcare is not a long term solution. NGOs are basically subversive elements operating in your country.
The only long term way of getting decent family planning in place is enough economic growth and sensible governance to get the country to a point where basic clinic services like contraception and healthcare are provided by their own people. Zimbabwe is an absolute basket case, they aren’t going there any time soon.

The abortion and LGBTQ crap is pushed by these NGOs as well, and that’s subversive and damaging. They should be evicting all these NGOs and educating their people/making contraception available themselves. No money? Well maybe some of grace mugabe’s descendants can give back some of the billions they pilfered from the national cofffers
 
Boomers making sure black babies aren't getting aborted not just in the US but in Africa is well is so tiresome

>M-muh stop having sex! I'm 61 and I can't do it anymore so you shouldn't get to either!

Nigger faggots you had crack induced gigaorgies in your youth

>M-muh birth control1!1
Sets out the second the woman gets the shits which is the norm for the continent that still has cholera epidemics
 
Because men see it as a pure women's issue. But then think they have a say when it comes to abortions. Either men take responsibility and only have sex when 1. they want a child or 2. the man uses proper protection, or, they keep doing what they do and stfu about women wanting an abortion. It has been a issue for decades that all men just want sex but want 0 responsibility! They push taking care of protection during sex, dealing with pregnancy and being aware of STDs onto women and don't care about what they do. Didn't gay men spread AIDS because they care as little about protection as straight men? I notice a pattern....

Edit: not a single straight man on this planet will say: "let's not have sex tonight, I don't have any protection with me and I don't want to risk getting you pregnant". Instead men expect that women take care of protection and don't waste a single thought on it. If the woman he had sex with gets pregnant, he says "why don't you use protection?", "why aren't you taking the pill?", "it's your issue, not my problem, deal with it and leave me out of it" and the number 1 used moid sentence "close your legs". That's the same type of man marching on the street, protesting abortion rights.

This issue will persist until men start acting like adults and take responsibility.
If you're being serious your argument bolsters the conclusion that women shouldn't be allowed to vote.
 
I fully support unlimited abortion and birth control related costs to Africa. Make it so. Also, make it mandatory. All women must tie their tubes at age 16.

Amen.
Why not mandatory vasectomies for all men?

Men: "close your legs! Get your tubes tied!!"
Women: "go get a vasectomy."
Men: *autistic moid screeching*

Moids can't deal with the fact that it's their problem and issue if they get someone pregnant and they have to deal with it and use their brain for once before fucking some random woman. But we expect too much from men...
 
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Why not mandatory vasectomies for all men?

Men: "close your legs! Get your tubes tied!!"
Women: "go get a vasectomy."
Men: *autistic moid screeching*

Moids can't deal with the fact that it's their problem and issue if they get someone pregnant and they have to deal with it and use their brain for once before fucking some random woman. But we expect too much from men...
We are talking about men. Men don't get shit for health care. It's easier to sell if we package it as WOMEN'S HEALTH CARE.
 
We are talking about men. Men don't get shit for health care. It's easier to sell if we package it as WOMEN'S HEALTH CARE.
Wow, the US must be shit if men don't get any health care. It is just odd because the rest of health care is always revolving around men. E.g., women are constantly overmedicated because everything is adjusted to men and nobody gives a shit.
 
I think birth control to the third world is good. Actually, it's good everywhere but especially in Africa where there's famine plus excessive births per woman.
It's not good for the planet for too many Africans to be born (to an excessive degree) and not good for overburdened immigration systems like in Europe either. Kind of shortsighted to throw the baby out with the bathwater.
I get not wanting to fund abortions but we're talking about people that will breed this planet into extinction so it's probably a lesser evil at this point and I am not a big abortion supporter. Maybe make it so only medically necessary abortions are done with the aid money and long acting birth control like arm implants and IUDs are promoted?
 
think birth control to the third world is good.
So do I. Not the abortions, but implants. IUDs can be an issue in places with rampant STDs.
NGOs doing it though - it’s like inviting subversive foreign spies in
The issue is then separating the two - does the ban only apply to abortion pushing? If a group were ONLY doing contraception and pre/antenatal care they’d be ok? If so, then why isn’t this done?
Well I know why, it’s becasue they need to have a wedge for alphabet people and moloch
 
The Mirena IUD is effective for contraceptive purposes for up to eight years, needs no maintenance or user input once it's in, is quick to fit and remove, is 99.8% effective, ceases to have any effect on fertility once removed, and is very difficult for a third party to tamper with.

I'm just saying.
Counterpoint: we could get rid of the natives who fail the paper bag test through any means and establish the continent of Greater Rhodesia.

I'm just saying, if you're going to dream, dream big.
 
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