More than
400 delegates, including one heads of state, ministers, policy makers and civil
society representatives from 47 countries will review– in Bangkok this week during sixth Asian and
Pacific Population Conference (APPC) – population and development challenges
facing the Asia-Pacific region, including the unprecedented pace of population
ageing, migration, and urbanisation and changing household and family
structures.
The
Conference will also tackle a range of issues critical to human rights and
development, including sexual and reproductive health and rights, gender
equality and women’s empowerment, HIV and AIDS, gender-based violence, and the
rights of young people.
In the
Asia-Pacific region, too many women still die as a result of childbirth. Lack
of information on sexual and reproductive health, and limited access to related
services, is contributing to unintended pregnancies and unsafe abortions. The gaps
also expose millions to the risk of HIV and other sexually transmitted disease.
The five-day
Conference – organised by the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for
Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) in cooperation with UNFPA, the United Nations
Population Fund – will be instrumental in shaping the regional population
agenda for the next decade and is expected to arrive at fresh solutions to
address these population and development challenges.
It is
expected to adopt a Ministerial Declaration that will also serve as the
Asia-Pacific regional input to the global 20-year review of the International
Conference on Population and Development (ICPD).
The United Nations General Assembly will convene a special session next year to recommit and advance the ICPD Programme of Action – the first United Nations framework to recognise reproductive rights and gender equality as essential to sustainable development and poverty eradication.
The United Nations General Assembly will convene a special session next year to recommit and advance the ICPD Programme of Action – the first United Nations framework to recognise reproductive rights and gender equality as essential to sustainable development and poverty eradication.
Addressing
the opening today UNFPA executive director Babatunde Osotimehin cited a regional survey on progress since the ICPD
conducted by ESCAP in cooperation with UNFPA. “It shows that Asia-Pacific
countries have made important gains but need to do more to reduce economic
inequality, ensure access to contraception, prevent maternal deaths and HIV
infections, respond to the rights and needs of young people and end violence
against women and girls,” he said, adding that successfully addressing the unfinished
agenda is not only the right thing to do but also smart economics.
At the close of the
Conference on September 20, ministers from 46 countries are expected to
recommit to redouble their efforts to advance the population and development
agenda in Asia and the Pacific.
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