Population control in Malawi: Treating pregnancies like diseasesIn the name of “family planning,” Western organizations with roots in London, New York and Brussels are facilitating population control campaigns in Malawi and other African nations through treating pregnant women with abortifacients and other forms of contraception that not only kill their preborn children, but sterilize the women as well.
A Closer LookTo get their foot in the door, many developed nations have allegedly touted plans to eradicate maternal mortality in Third World nations such as Malawi with the true intentions of preventing motherhood via a wide array of drugs.
Western allies have urged Malawi government officials and other governments across the continent to get their population numbers down by promoting reproductive (abortion) “rights” and encouraging the widespread use of contraceptives. As increasing numbers become more assimilated into the culture of death, many have witnessed Malawi and other African nations experiencing more and more health complications — such as infertility — as a result of using contraceptives often used as abortive chemical agents.
Many of the population-control programs implemented in African nations are set up as family-planning programs, which governments are able to bring into their counties if they agree to allow the assistance of nonprofit government organizations (NGOs). These have been instrumental in wiping out substantial population growth for decades.
“Since 1989, one such non-profit organization, Banja la Mtsogolo (BLM), has grown like a cancer, serving over 450 communities, most of them in remote rural areas that are difficult to reach,” reports LifeNews.com’s Emil Hagamu, who is based in Lilongwe, Malawi. “BLM was founded by the Marie Stopes International Partnership (which promotes abortion) and boasts that it has provided services based on long-acting or permanent family planning methods.”
BLM boasts that its extending reach continues to have an increasingly significant impact on bringing Malawi’s population of 13 million under control.
“[We have] doubled the number of young women accessing contraception since 2011, and … [will] reach more than 100,000 women under the age of 25 this year,” the NGO declares.
With death come consequences
In order to minimize the number of births in Malawi, those administering and providing birth control and pregnancy-ending drugs are reported to keep the adverse effects secret.
“Unfortunately, unsuspecting women in Malawi are offered emergency contraceptive pills, often without being told of the grave side effects and the abortifacient effects of the methods,” Hagamu explained. “Because impoverished African families are sick much of the time, they spend a good sum of family income for medical treatment. Many suffering women need help to alleviate the problems associated from infertility and contraception usage.”
And not all the contraceptives distributed throughout Malawi are free. Contraceptives in the southeastern African nation are a generator of big business and work toward the population-control agendas of Western nations.
“Amidst the siege of the population controllers, Malawians are frantically fighting to preserve the family,” Hagamu attests. “During my recent visit, I saw large billboards on all major roads, town centers, and even in remote areas, promoting condom brands.”
Hagamu argues that virtually all Malawians are influenced by the “culture of death” sweeping the nation.
“Sex ‘education’ is in place in all schools of Malawi, and through it, young women are encouraged to abandon motherhood in order to hold positions of political or economic power,” Hagamu shared. “Though Malawi restricts abortion, there is a strong campaign to legalize abortion as a medically viable treatment with strong funding by pro-abortion lobbies.”
According to Hagamu, organizations proclaiming that limiting fertility rates lead to progress have it all backward.
“NGOs seduce governments into believing that poor countries like Malawi should suppress fertility in order to join the developed world,” Hagamu contends. “However, these fertility measures rarely ever build a Culture of Life.”
He insists that suppressing God’s gift of life is no way for any nation to flourish, noting that child elimination should play no part in family planning.
“Though economic progress and infrastructure is needed for less-developed countries, what is not needed is the targeting of rural villages for sterilization campaigns,” Hagamu asserts. “What is needed are country-wide natural family planning programs that affirm healthy families and healthy marriages, giving women and men a healthy and spiritually sound method to cooperate with God’s plan for their families.”
Hagamu stresses that if nations do not honor God by respecting human life, they will never truly flourish.
“As the Church teaches, there can be serious reasons to postpone pregnancy, and doing so with a natural method that does not require contraception or abortion has been shown many times over to result in healthier families, something we see less and less of in the developed world,” Hagamu concludes.
http://www.onenewsnow.com/pro-life/2014/12/03/population-control-in-malawi-treating-pregnancies-like-diseases#.VIRqKcmOzf0