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Swedish aid agency to halt funds for supporters of U.S. anti-abortion "gag rule"

by Reuters
Tuesday, 11 July 2017 14:42 GMT

Sweden's flag is seen near the Stockholm Cathedral in Gamla Stan or the Old Town district of Stockholm, Sweden, June 9, 2010. REUTERS/Bob Strong

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Sida administers about half of Sweden's total development aid budget

STOCKHOLM, July 11 (Reuters) - Sweden's international aid agency is set to halt funding for sexual and reproductive health programmes of organisations which acquiesce in President Donald Trump's ban on federal funding for foreign groups providing abortions or abortion support.

Trump this year reinstated a policy that requires foreign NGOs which receive U.S. global family planning funds to certify that they do not perform abortions or provide abortion advice as a method of family planning.

Known by critics as the "global gag" rule, Trump broadened its scope to include all global health assistance in his Jan. 23 executive order, withholding at least half a billion dollars in U.S. funds.

Sweden's international aid agency Sida said that funding agreements for sexual and reproductive issues with organisations which go along with the U.S. presidential order could be cancelled and support phased out.

"The American policy is at loggerheads with the Swedish position," Sida Director-General Carin Jamtin said.

"This is about women themselves having the right to decide when, and if, they want to have children and how many they want to have."

The State Department said in April it was ending U.S. funding for the United Nations Population Fund, the body's agency focused on family planning and maternal and child health.

Sweden has spoken out against the presidential order in the past and earlier this year became one of eight countries to join an initiative to raise millions of dollars to replace shortfalls caused by the U.S. ban.

Sida is an aid agency that works under the directives of the Swedish government and parliament. It administers about half of Sweden's total development aid budget while the rest is distributed through the foreign ministry.

(Reporting by Niklas Pollard; Editing by Richard Balmforth)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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