In January 2017, President Trump signed an executive order re-instating the Mexico City Policy, also known as the ‘Global Gag Rule’ (GGR). This new extended GGR applies to all global health assistance furnished by all US departments and agencies. Against this background, IPPF intensified its resource mobilization efforts throughout 2017 and was successful to receive pledges of support from a number of donor governments. As a result, IPPF set up a two-year funding mechanism to provide grants to those Member Associations most affected by the GGR. FPA Sri Lanka was one beneficiary of this funding.
Objectives and activities of the project
1. Increase knowledge on and access to quality comprehensive SRHR services and products for industrial sector workers, rural and urban underserved communities and other marginalized communities so that communities are able to take decisions on SRHR. –
Volunteer health assistants will be trained and deployed to deliver community based SRHR services and to distribute contraceptive items among people in areas selected on the basis of having higher fertility rates, higher teenage pregnancies, social exclusion of women etc. Furthermore, they will also operate as demand generators in communities.
2. Bridging knowledge gaps on SRHR among multiple stakeholders
Service delivery points of FPA Sri Lanka are located in diverse areas with specific and unique needs. As these entities have become more self-reliant, the service provision needs to increase geographically. Therefore, there is a need to raise awareness on the service availability through diverse interventions with a view to generate demand.
3. Advocacy efforts to target supporting legal and policy reforms for SRHR and countering opposition, and where relevant, carrying out the Organization’s advocacy efforts around the GGR.