12A - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 6, 1995 At U.N. conference, Mrs. Clintonlashes out at government- coerced abortions NATIa Nwoty Los Angeles Times BEIJING - In her first public ap- pearance at the U.N. Fourth World Con- ference on Women yesterday, first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton lashed out at government-coerced sterilizations and abortions that are practiced widely in China and other developing countries. Clinton, speaking before a forum on women's health at the conference, did not mention China or any other country by name. But her comments echoed those of many critics of China's family planning programs who claim that abor- tion and sterilization are used as gov- ernment-sponsored birth control tech- niques, often against the will ofwomen. "Women and men must also have the right to make those most intimate of all decisions freeofdiscrimination, coercion and violence, particularly any coercive practices that force women into abortions or sterilizations," Clinton said. The comments are likely designed to please U.S. political groups who have urged Clinton to use the Beijing confer- ence as a platform to condemn human rights abuses, said Kenneth Lieberthal, a political science professor at the Uni- versity. U.S. Rep. ChristopherSmith (R-N.J.) an outspoken abortion foe, held a news' conference Monday in Beijing at which he called for Clinton to make just such a condemnation. However, in her nine-page remarks before the women's health forum, Clinton also called for increased access to health care and family planning ser- vices for the world's women. Clinton said, "One hundred million women cannot obtain or are not using family planning services because they are poor, uneducated or lack access to care," using language likely to please those on the other side of the abortion debate. "Twenty million ofthese women will seek unsafe abortions -some will die, some will be disabled for life." Lieberthal, an expert on China, said, "She is seen as someone who can focus global attention on women's rights in a significant way. "Many delegates were anxious for her to attend this conference," he said. Earlier, controversies over Chinese security gave way to debates over domes- tic and state violence against women as the conference officially opened Mon- day. Declaring that women "are no longer guests on this planet," the conference's secretary general, Gertrude Mongella of Tanzania, announced to cheers and trills from thousands of women that "this planet belongs to them too. A revolution has begun." Besides Clinton, other prominent fe- male leaders, including Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and Bangladeshi Prime Minister Khaleda Zia, arrived to try to create a new foun- dation for women's advancement. But despite the enthusiasm, the con- ference, which continues until Sept. 15, heralds less a revolution than a holding pattern. International delegates are dig- ging in to preserve positions on abor- tion and sex education that were agreed on last year at the U.N. Conference on Population and Development in Cairo. "There will be no unraveling of com- mitments - neither today's nor last year's, and certainly not this decade's commitments," Mongella said. "This revolution is toojust, too important and certainly long overdue." As Mongella and others spoke inside the hall, South African representative Winnie Mandela and her entourage had been turned away from the ceremony because they arrived late. An ensuing clash with guards who shoved them from the steps of the building was the first example in the capital of the kind of confrontations between hyper-cau- tious security forces and activist women that have plagued a parallel forum out- side the city. Some participants at the Non-Govern- mental Organizations Forum on Women an hour north of Beijing have complained of being harassed, followed and intimi- dated by police who fear the women are hurting the interests of the country. On Monday, nearly 1,000 women dressed in black and carrying candles scuffled with police three times as they marched to the edges of the forum site to protest violence and discrimination against women and the United Nations' failure to back up their right to demon- strate there without interference. Although prominent delegates have urgedthatwomen refocus onthe issues of the conference andnoton its host, China's human rights record and strict family- planning policies constitute an electric undercurrent in conference discussions. Bhutto emphatically condemned fe- male infanticide, a practice reportedly still common in China, in her opening- day address. "As we gather here today, the cries of the girl child reach out to us," Bhutto said. "This conference needs to chart a course that can create a climate where the girl child is as welcomed and valued as a boy child, that the girl child is considered as worthy as a boy child." Joaquin Navarro-Valls, official spokesman for the Vatican delegation to the conference, commented: "I find it sad that people at the conference are talking about the problems of female (infanticide) in Africa but do not men- tion it here in China, where the practice is most widespread." - Daily StaffReporter Jodi Cohen contributed to this report. Above: A Filipino women's group acts out a scene during an anti- imperialism demonstration at the NGO Forum on Women yesterday. Left: First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton shares a, lighter moment with Gertrude Mongolia, secretary general of the fourth U.N. World Conference on Women. AP PHOTO p When they say "you can't always get what ou want, they aren't talkin' 'bout "f furniture., not aln $7 $3G Least .*. .. s .:*'.: s S A practical chair for any room. Made of a soft foam, it is per- fect for expected co .. (as usual) unexpect :"<:' guests because it becomes a bed. It :; .comes in a light denim a black and white check, and a price of $37 + $10 (shipping handling), it's so Dr ed Y1'aA L $47 or at and inexpensive you could buy two. $38 The oft-overlooked TV stand. Since it sup- ports the most vital - ^" .thing in your room, it's the second most vital item you may own. (No time for TV you say? This piece pine full sized futon and frame. The futon couch doubles as a bed, and is perfect for even the smallest rooms. Pick white or forest green. Priced at $132 + $30 (shipping and handling). Sorry, the pillow and blanket aren't included. $63 Your choice, either an oak (as showr) or black media system to hold ill your VCR tapes, compact discs and cassettes. Perfect Your school spirit shows through with this, . , . .?.s.^_. ...., :# l 7' for ay size collection, and 4 0 i',