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Vatican, Muslim States Block Women's Rights Drive At United Nations.


Efforts to expand a United Nations document outlining the universal rights of women ran into a roadblock in June thanks to opposition from the Vatican and its fundamentalist fundamentalist

An investor who selects securities to buy and sell on the basis of fundamental analysis. Compare technician.
 Muslim allies.

The new document was an effort to build on a statement on women's rights The effort to secure equal rights for women and to remove gender discrimination from laws, institutions, and behavioral patterns.

The women's rights movement began in the nineteenth century with the demand by some women reformers for the right to vote, known as suffrage, and
 approved five years ago at a UN conference in Bejing, China. The original document states that women "have the right to decide freely and responsibly on matters related to their sexuality" and can do so without "coercion, discrimination and violence."

Several Western nations had lobbied for expanding the document to include explicit references See explicit link.  to women's rights to access safe abortions. They also wanted to include a broader definition of the word "family" and some type of acknowledgement of gay rights. This effort, however, was turned back thanks to Vatican-led opposition.

Joining the Roman Catholic Church Roman Catholic Church, Christian church headed by the pope, the bishop of Rome (see papacy and Peter, Saint). Its commonest title in official use is Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church.  in opposing the expansion of women's rights were hardline Muslim nations, including Iran, Libya, Algeria, Pakistan and Sudan.

Delegates from 180 nations did approve some changes to the document, including the addition of language opposing domestic violence, marital rape and so-called "honor killings," whereby women are murdered by family members who claim they have shamed them.

Advocates of women's rights noted that the Vatican-led alliance had hoped to roll back some of the rights outlined in the original Bejing document. That effort failed, leading one UN official to claim victory.

"I'm very happy that the dire predictions that there would be a rollback A DBMS feature that reverses the current transaction out of the database, returning the data to its former state. A rollback is performed when processing a transaction fails at some point, and it is necessary to start over. See two-phase commit.  have proved false," said Angela King Angela Evelyn Vernon King (August 28, 1938 - February 5, 2007) was a Jamaican diplomat. She worked for the United Nations for 38 years, from 1966 to 2004, working mainly for equal rights for women. , a UN official who oversees women's rights issues. "We were determined to get a strong document that did not in any way diminish the gains women had achieved in Bejing. We were also determined to go beyond Bejing, and we did, despite the efforts of countries that made the process such an arduous one."

But church officials also claimed success. After the vote, Archbishop Renato Martino His Eminence Cardinal Renato Raffaele Martino, J.C.D (born 23 November 1932) is an Italian churchman, Cardinal Deacon, and President of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace and Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant People in the Roman Catholic Church. , the Vatican representative at the UN, told Catholic News Service, "I saw again that the developed world tried to impose a decadent dec·a·dent  
adj.
1. Being in a state of decline or decay.

2. Marked by or providing unrestrained gratification; self-indulgent.

3. often Decadent Of or relating to literary Decadence.

n.
 view of society on the rest of the world. I thank God they did not succeed."

Martino, noting that the Vatican was accused of entering into "unholy alliances" with fundamentalist Muslim nations, added, "I'm not bothered. We do not seek accolades. We have to uphold principles."

Bishop William F. Murphy, writing in the Boston Pilot, took things a step further and saluted the radical Muslim nations that formed a partnership with the Vatican. "Don't be fooled," Murphy wrote. "It is the `conservative Vatican' or in reality the Holy See and other brave nations who are speaking out for life and defending women and children against the forces of the culture of death who think abortion is liberation."
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Publication:Church & State
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:0JINT
Date:Jul 1, 2000
Words:453
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