Today as we commemorate World Population Day,
let us renew our commitment to human dignity and
the right to live in freedom from fear and want.
Let us accelerate efforts to achieve the Millennium
Development Goals to eliminate extreme poverty
and hunger and to improve the health of people
and our planet.
We must join forces to advance
women's empowerment and to ensure universal access
to reproductive health by 2015. Reproductive health
services protect the health of women, mothers
and their babies.
Urgent action is needed because
the goal to improve maternal health is generating
the least resources and lagging the furthest behind.
Maternal death and disability
could be reduced dramatically if every woman had
access to health services throughout her lifecycle,
especially during pregnancy and childbirth. Today
millions of women lack access to health services,
which puts their lives at risk.
Now is the time to accelerate
action to ensure that health services reach women
in the communities in which they live. Three reproductive
health services are vital for maternal health:
skilled attendance at birth, emergency obstetric
care and family planning to time and space births.
Family planning is also essential
to women's empowerment and gender equality. When
a woman can plan her family, she can plan the
rest of her life. Information and services for
family planning allow individuals and couples
to realize their right to determine the number,
spacing and timing of their children.
Family planning is also an effective
means in the fight against poverty. Parents can
plan ahead and devote more of their resources
to the education and health of each child, which
benefits the family, community and nation.
Today, on World Population Day,
UNFPA, the United Nations Population Fund, pledges
its commitment to support health and equal opportunity
for all people.
We call on all governments to
ensure universal access to reproductive health
by 2015 and to back up this promise with political
commitment and financial investment. It is time
to make reproductive health a priority.