Vatican Asks UN to Drop “Unfounded” Population Control Programs

By Susan Brinkmann, OCDS
Staff Writer

The Vatican’s United Nations (UN) representative, Archbishop Celestino Migliore, is calling on the global body to stop promoting population control programs that were designed to counter a “population explosion” that never happened, and have led to serious demographic decline in many nations.

According to a report by LifeSiteNews.com, the Archbishop submitted the letter on Oct. 13 to the President of the 64th General Assembly in conjunction with the UN’s commemoration of the fifteenth anniversary of the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) in Cairo in 1994.

The Archbishop’s points out that, at the time, many member states “were under the impression that a population explosion was going to occur and hamper the ability to achieve adequate global economic development. . . . Now fifteen years later, we see that this perception was unfounded.”

Instead, many developed countries are now facing demographic decline, he wrote, with some countries now advocating higher birth rates for the sake of the economy.

“ . . . (T)he greatest threat to development results not from a population explosion but from irresponsible world and local economic management,” he said.

“For nearly a century, attempts have been made to link global population with the food, energy, natural resources and environmental crises.Yet, on the contrary, it has been consistently demonstrated by human ingenuity and the ability of people to work together that human persons are the world’s greatest resource.”

He went on to condemn interpretations of the ICPD goals regarding maternal health that have resulted in the promotion of abortion and birth control. “Too often in addressing the role of the ICPD on maternal health, attempts are made to promote a notion of sexual and reproductive health which is detrimental to unborn human life and the integral needs of women and men within society,” he wrote. 

“Efforts to address maternal mortality, obstetric fistula, child mortality, prenatal and antenatal care, sexually transmitted diseases and other health matters are hampered by sanitary policies which fail to take into account the right to life of the unborn child and promote birth control as a development policy and disguised health service.”

Referring to a stipulation made at the Cairo conference that “no UN agency can be allowed to promote abortion,” the archbishop observes that “suggesting that reproductive health includes a right to abortion explicitly violates the language of the ICPD, defies moral and legal standards within local communities and divides efforts to address the real needs of mothers and children.”

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