WASHINGTON, DC (CWNews.com/C-fam) - The US Congress this
week began considering resolutions condemning the ongoing
attack on the presence of the Holy See at the UN. The
resolutions threaten that a Vatican ouster from the UN
would "further damage relations between the United States
and the United Nations," according to a report from the
Catholic Family & Human Rights Institute (C-fam).
A campaign to revoke the Vatican's status as a Permanent
Observer at the UN began last year under the leadership of
the pro-abortion US group, Catholics for a Free Choice.
Nearly 400 organizations, mostly pro-abortion advocates
like International Planned Parenthood Federation, have
joined the call for UN Secretary General Kofi Annan to
"review" the Holy See's status with a view to downgrading
them to non-governmental organization status.
Even campaign organizer Frances Kissling does not believe
her campaign will be successful. Rather she expects the
campaign will "keep the Vatican on its toes" during UN
conferences. It is understood her intention is to
intimidate the Holy See delegations and its allies in the
developing world. The Holy See participates in a coalition
of Latin American and Muslim states that has successfully
kept abortion from becoming an international human right.
The Senate and House resolutions emphasize that the attack
on the Holy See comes mostly over the question of abortion.
The resolutions, introduced by Rep. Christopher Smith,
R-New Jersey, in the House, and by Sens. Rick Santorum,
R-Pennsylvania, and Bob Smith, I-New Hampshire, in the
Senate, praise the Holy See's work at the UN. The
resolutions also counter the claim that the Holy See is not
a state and thereby should be afforded no place at the UN by
pointing out that the Holy See has traded diplomats for 1600
years and is recognized as a state by as many 169 nations.
The resolutions "strongly object to any effort to expel the
Holy See from the United Nations as a state participant by
removing its status as a nonmember state Permanent
Observer," and says "that any degradation of the status
accorded to the Holy See would seriously damage the
credibility of the United Nations by demonstrating that its
rules of participation are manipulable for ideological
reasons rather than being rooted in neutral principles and
objective facts of sovereignty."