Saturday, June 20, 2009

New Declaration Says "Sexuality Is an Essential Part of Humanity"


By Marcela Valente, IPS News. Posted June 13, 2009.


The International Planned Parenthood Federation launched the world's first declaration of sexual rights in the Buenos Aires on Wednesday.


BUENOS AIRES, Jun 10 (IPS) - In an effort to promote the free enjoyment of human sexuality, separate from reproduction, the International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF) launched the world's first declaration of sexual rights in the Argentine capital on Wednesday.

"We want states to commit themselves to protecting these rights, and for the United Nations to adopt them in future meetings," Carmen Barroso, IPPF regional director for the Western hemisphere, told IPS.

"Sexual Rights: An IPPF Declaration", the result of two years' work by a multi-disciplinary team, proposes that "sexuality is an essential part of our humanity," and that its free expression "is a component of human rights." The Declaration espouses "the entitlement to experience and enjoy sexuality independent of reproduction."

The New York-based IPPF, which has offices in over 150 countries, provides training and technical assistance for the promotion and defence of sexual and reproductive health for men and women on every continent.

Barroso said that in Latin America, there is "inertia" on the part of governments, which agree to proposals for developing sexual health issues but do not translate them into public policies. There is also a "tremendously conservative" lobby in the United States, she added.

"The new administration" of U.S. President Barack Obama "is no longer exporting the obscurantist, anti-scientific and absurd ideology that demonises the use of condoms and argues that they do not provide protection against disease, but resistance to them continues in the region," she said.

There are also "structural factors" in Latin America that hamper sexual rights, such as poverty, lack of education, gender inequality and other inequalities "between social classes, between ethnic groups, some of which are extremely underprivileged, and between regions, even within the same country," she said.

For example, Argentine physician Enrique Berner, president of the Adolescent-2000 Health Foundation (FUSA 2000) and head of adolescent services at the "Dr. Cosme Argerich" Acute General Hospital in Buenos Aires, said at the launch ceremony that the teenage pregnancy rate in the south of the Argentine capital is three times the city average.

The south side is one of the most impoverished areas of the city, where more than 20 percent of pregnant mothers-to-be are under 18, compared with an overall average of less than seven percent for the capital.

Barroso, an expert on sexual and reproductive health, said human rights in general gained ground in the mid-20th century, and expanded in the 1990s with the recognition of children's rights. In the mid-1990s, the U.N. affirmed reproductive rights, "but sexuality was tagged on as an afterthought," she said.

"People talked about sexual and reproductive rights, but in fact they meant reproductive rights only," she said. In 1995 at the World Conference on Women in Beijing, sexual rights were introduced in the negative, as "women's right not to suffer harm, violence or coercion" in sexual intercourse, she said.


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