Thank you for the question.
Certainly, the international community has agreed for decades that individuals and couples have the right to decide the number, timing, and spacing of their children. In 1994--and that was 15 years ago--reproductive rights were recognized for the first time by the international community.
Reproductive rights are very expansive. They include reproductive health. They include sexual health. We are talking about a broad framework of human rights that are based on our international treaties, that are based on the interpretations of human rights experts, that form the standards, and that are fleshed out in these consensus agreements at international conferences.
In fact, the title of paragraph 8.25 is “Addressing Unsafe Abortion”. That's what the paragraph is meant to address. That paragraph took over one year to negotiate. As you can imagine, in early 1994 it was extraordinarily controversial.
So every government in the world in the United Nations system has agreed on this carefully formulated language, which says where abortion is legal, it must be safe and accessible, and where it is not legal, we have to deal with the millions of women every year who suffer from complications from unsafe abortions. When states do not do that, they are violating women's rights to life, to health, to equality, and to non-discrimination. That's the agreed-upon consensus.
So for this government to ignore those extraordinary internationally agreed-upon human rights standards is inappropriate, especially given that we have signed an all-party ODA accountability act that requires us to give our foreign aid consistent with international human rights standards.
That's exactly what I said and it's what I believe. I'm a human rights lawyer. That's what I do for a living. I work on sexual and reproductive health, so it was very concerning to me to hear the minister's testimony, to take even a part of a sentence and say that this is what we're going to base our action plan on, when, if you read the entire paragraph--which I have as a footnote in my speaking notes--it's far broader.
I have some of the international agreed-upon definitions here around sexual and reproductive rights. They're very comprehensive. We have agreed to them and reaffirmed them over and over and over again.