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For Immediate Release
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For Immediate Release
Haiti, which once had the highest rate of HIV/AIDS outside of sub-Saharan Africa, has in
recent years seen a decrease in infections. Once lumped into what some called the US Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention’s ‘4-H club’ of risk factors—homosexuals, hemophiliacs,
heroin users and Haitians—the country’s HIV incidence plunged from around 6% in
1995 to closer to 2% in recent years. But the 12 January earthquake that shattered the lives of
Haitians and destroyed more than half of the AIDS clinics in Port-au-Prince could threaten to reverse this progress.
For Immediate Release
5th March 2010
New York
http://www.genderlinks.org.za/attachment.php?aa_id=10938

Contact: Laura Zaks, 212.214.0287/347.563.6408/lzaks@ippfwhr.org
Haiti Disaster: IPPF Provides Urgent Health Response
The Minister of International Cooperation, Beverley Oda, unveiled the new Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) Children and Youth Strategy on Nov. 20, 2009. It aims to increase child survival —including maternal health— to improve the quality of education and ensure the safety and security of children and youth. In the Americas where maternal mortality rates are stagnating and
teenage pregnancy is on the rise, this goal cannot be accomplished without renewed attention to sexual and reproductive health.
WASHINGTON, September 28, 2009 – The International Planned Parenthood/Western Hemisphere Region (IPPF/WHR) hosted its 28th annual awards and cocktail reception here this past weekend at the Embassy of Colombia.
The occasion honored the achievements of IPPF Member Associations, individuals and institutions who have raised public awareness and contributed to the advancement of sexual and reproductive health and rights around the world.
Contact:
Laura Zaks, IPPF/WHR
Tel. (212) 214-0287
Email: lzaks@ippfwhr.org
UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY ADOPTS RESOLUTION FOR NEW UN WOMEN’S AGENCY
To the Family of George Tiller, M.D.
September 25, 2009
The IPPF has a statement entitled “What We Believe”. It reads:
“We believe that sexual and reproductive rights should be internationally recognized as human rights and therefore guaranteed for everyone. We encourage individuals, women in particular, to take control of their reproductive lives. We promote equality between men and women, aiming to eliminate gender biases, especially those that threaten the wellbeing of women and girls. Above all, we promote choices.”
I applaud Nicholas D. Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn for their remarkable work of highlighting the enormous multiplier effect that the empowerment of women has on families and entire communities. Their efforts have brought to life the dynamic stories of so many girls and women in developing countries who have overcome unthinkable hardship. Yet I was struck by the lack of attention paid to Latin America and the Caribbean in “The Women’s Crusade.” Latin America and the Caribbean is a region of extreme contrasts.