In a rather chaotic way,
the CPD started off on Monday. Delegates and civil society alike had to wait
for almost two hours to get their UN groundspass. Space for civil society
representatives was very little. They were sent to the ‘overflow room’. However
in that room, the sound didn’t match with the screen play! The negotiations had
started already before the weekend, and would resume on Monday afternoon. But
again a too small room was provided: even with the regulation that just one
person per delegation could join, not all countries attending could fit. The
Chair suspended the negotiations until Tuesday morning. With everyone geared up
to get started, this was kind of a deception.
Civil society participation turned out to be
difficult. The rules were changed after the game had already started. The pass
participants from civil society had received was only valid for two days. From
Wednesday onwards, they would not be able to enter the UN building. This
regulation was of course opposed by civil society and friendly governments. People
spend a lot of money and time to join in this meeting, just to discover that
they could not even join! As the pressure on the organisers went up, they
decided to issue a limited number of tickets per day. These were to be handed
out on a first come, first serve basis. Again questions were raised, and then
the number of tickets per day was increased allowing everyone to attend.
Tuesday morning negotiations started in a bigger room,
where all countries attending could fit (even with more then one representative
per country). Text proposals had been prepared and discussed with those
delegations which were assumed to include these in their suggestions to the
Chair. Not all those attending however, wanted to discuss substance. Especially
the African Group pleaded for having just a procedural negotiation. It took a
while before they realized the ship had already sailed. But when that happened,
they started bringing in pages of language suggestions. On Wednesday
evening, the Commission had gone through the text twice. It had grown from a
text of 4 pages into one of 28 pages. This is being streamlined now in a new
version, expected to come out on Thursday early morning. Curious what new
dynamic that will bring!
Looking at the negotiations, civil society participation
is a big success. This year 60 civil society representatives are included in
country delegations of 47 countries. This is a huge success in itself, for
which civil society has worked very hard especially over the last couple of
months. It enables civil society to closely monitor the negotiations. Civil
society representatives in the negotiation room send the information on which
country or which negotiation block is presenting what to their colleagues who
are not in the negotiation room. This way we are kept informed very well. And
it enables very targeted advocacy with the delegations. Despite delaying
tactics of the opposition, support for SRHR is clearly visible.
In parallel with the negotiations going on behind
closed doors, the plenary session is held. Here countries give their so-called
country statement. Apart from Russia, which was totally negative, no surprises
here. Stefan Hennis from CHOICE gave a powerful statement for the Netherlands.
He told the audience he didn’t have a special story to tell: he got sexuality
education, was able to access contraceptives, doesn’t have to fear for an
unwanted pregnancy, he and his girlfriend can access emergency contraception
and safe, legal abortion services. In 20 years from now, this ordinary story should
be more common than it is today. He got a big applause from the audience!
Yvonne Bogaarts
Manager Advocacy Rutgers WPF
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