Big Porn, Big Pharma, Big Government and NGOs are Partnering
to Make Abortion and Sterilization Salable in India
by By Celeste McGovern and Steven Mosher
Think of franchises, and McDonald’s or Starbucks springs to
mind. But how about franchising clinics that do abortions and
sterilizations? The population control movement has thought of this too.
In the developing world, so-called “reproductive health clinics” are
spreading like fast food chains in America through a network of
organizations that want abortion and birth control drugs as readily
available as a slurpee at 7 Eleven.
With their slick marketing and eye-catching logos, these
population control franchises are definitely not home-grown. They are
not run by local private entrepreneurs, or by charities scraping by on
donation budgets. They are global concerns, backed by a potent
combination of Big Government, Big Pharma, Big Porn and Big Money. And
they all have a Big Population Control Agenda.
The movement is called “social franchising,” and the idea
behind it that you sell “behavior change” the way you sell Coca Cola or
Apple computers. It’s a little like anti-smoking or get-out-and-vote
campaigns, except it is selling the notion that babies are nuisances
that one is better off without.
Governments in populous developing nations like India have
long carried out crude and cruel campaigns that, for example, paid
people to bring in women for sterilization. Now, however, they have
signed onto sophisticated social marketing campaigns to “create demand”
for the Western population control agenda, helping to underwrite
anti-child advertisements in the mass media under the guise of
promoting maternal health.
The governments partner with major population control
players like Population Services International (PSI), International
Planned Parenthood Federation, DKT International and others. Such groups
come loaded with lots of foreign aid, prepared to sell the anti-child
message, train the “providers” and regulate the resulting franchises.
PRI interviewed Pritpal Marjara, managing director of
PSI-India, who proudly declared, “We create the demand and we also have
the products to supply it,” He should know. He has 15 years of
experience in the social marketing of anti-people products.
Washington, D.C.-based PSI is the acknowledged frontrunner
in the movement to franchise population control. It was founded in 1970
by Philip D. Harvey who, aside from his population control efforts, also
started one of the biggest erotica retailers in the world and is a
leading producer of pornography. Today it has an annual budget of $683
million and is working to undermine fertility in nearly 70 countries.
It was PSI that established the first large-scale birth control franchise, launching Greenstar
in Pakistan in 1991. In the years since, it has trained more than
24,000 “providers” who in turn operate some 7,000 clinics throughout the
country. It offers condoms, IUDs, abortifacient emergency
contraception, implants and sterilizations to low-income women, baiting
them into the clinics by means of a “voucher scheme.”
Although Greenstar eschews mentioning abortion in
connection with its operations in Muslim Pakistan, PSI openly provides
abortions in neighboring India.
According to Marjara, “Safe abortion is also one of the
program elements.” He could not say how many abortions were performed,
but insisted that “PSI focuses only on first trimester abortion.” Of
course, abortion is never safe for the unborn child being aborted.
Marjara also said that PSI works closely with the
government of India, recruiting and training abortion providers. Through
its network of 1,000 private providers in 30 districts, it also sells
180 million condoms annually, hands out 200,000 monthly doses of oral
contraceptives, and implants 300,000 IUDs.
Sterilization is not on PSI’s menu in India, claimed
Marjara. It is a touchy subject there, where men and women have been
sterilized in assembly-line fashion over the years. So it’s hardly
surprising that PSI might want to distance itself from the practice. But
you can hardly say they are taking an active stand against it. For
starters, they have no problem partnering with the governments that run
the camps. “PSI is a public partnership,” said Marjara. “We have very
strong linkages with the government.” Indeed.
What’s more, Marjara explained that the clinics PSI
operates are actually “fractional franchisees". “PSI does not own the
clinics,” he explained.“We have no administrative control over the
network.” In reality, this means that while PSI might be responsible for
quality training and assurance (as it is called), this oversight only
applies to the services to which it chooses to apply it. If one of its
providers does sterilizations at the clinic, in addition to abortions
and IUD insertions, PSI disclaims responsibility. Even though it is
underwriting the clinic with funds from American taxpayers.
This is a win-win situation for PSI and the franchisee.
PSI can claim to have nothing to do with coerced sterilizations (or
other violations of human rights), while the clinics can operate without
much oversight and with generous subsidies from unsuspecting taxpayers.
The big losers are the women who get whack-and-hack tubal ligations
that a North American veterinarian wouldn’t do to a dog.
Still, some foreign population control groups are more
uninhibited than others. Porn king Harvey’s DKT International runs a
franchising operating in India called Janani. Janani boasts that since
1996 it has sterilized over 270,000 women, 12,000 men, and surgically
aborted 250,000 babies. It also brags that it has sold over 450 million
condoms, 70 million oral contraceptive pills, 150,000 contraceptives,
150,000 IUDs, 250,000 medical abortion pills, and 600,000 emergency
contraceptive pills. Quite a record of reproductive ruin.
PSI’s Marjara insisted that the Indian national government
has publicly renounced sterilization. “The National Rural Health Mission
Strategy has shifted towards birth spacing rather than sterilization,”
he claimed.
What this means on the ground is that, while the government
is still paying “motivators” to bring in people for sterilization, it
has now added IUDs to the list of “products” that it is promoting. This
is touted as “providing better maternal care.”
Listen to Marjala: “Home-based deliveries are linked to
high mortality.” So the government has introduced a scheme to pay women
1400 rupees (about $30) who have their babies in a hospital franchise.
Then, when the baby arrives, the doctor can easily insert a copper IUD
in her uterus to prevent any future babies she conceives from implanting
there. “If they are in the hospital, then everyone is there, the
doctor, the nurse, and it can all be done at the same time and the woman
does not have to make a long journey to return to the hospital,” said
Marjara. As if she would want to.
Such behavior might cause a stir in litigious America where
women would object to being pressured into accepting an IUD when
population control agendas are so obviously in play.
The pro-life Population Research Institute is dedicated to ending human rights abuses committed in the name of "family planning," and to ending counter-productive social and economic paradigms premised on the myth of "overpopulation." Find us at pop.org.
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