Nations pledge to counter US abortion ban

To stop women's health taking "steps back into the Dark Ages" 50 nations are attending a family planning conference to counter the US ban on abortion funding.

Some 50 countries have signed up to attend a family planning conference in Brussels aimed at making up the gap left by President Donald Trump's ban on US funding to groups linked to abortion.

The participants agreed to attend the conference scheduled for Thursday on short notice and will discuss using pledges from other nations and the private sector to "make sure that the impact on the field is completely taken away," Belgian Vice Premier Alexander De Croo said on Wednesday.

"This should not be a moment where we are taking steps back into the Dark Ages for women and girls," De Croo said.

Trump's decision, one of his first acts as president, withholds about half a billion dollars a year from international groups that perform abortions or provide information about abortions.

Officials in many European nations and around the world say the move will hurt women and girls who need family planning most.

Belgium and several other countries already have committed to contributing at least 10 million euros ($A13.8 million) each. Beyond governments, philanthropists and private donors will be asked to contribute at the conference.

Outside of many European nations, Canada, African and Asian countries will also have representatives at the conference, as will the European Union and the United Nations.

Swedish Vice Premier Isabella Lovin told the AP that even though maternal mortality rates have declined by almost half in the last generation, "every second minute a woman or a girl dies in the world due to pregnancy".

The US ban on funding to organisations that perform abortions or discuss the procedure with clients has been instituted by Republican administrations and rescinded by Democratic ones since 1984.

Former President Barack Obama last lifted it in 2009. But Trump significantly expanded it in an executive order he signed on his first full day in office.

Instead of containing abortions, the move would increase dangerous pregnancy terminations, Lovin and De Croo said.


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Source: AAP



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