NAIROBI, Kenya, Apr 15 (LSN) - In startling reports coming out of Africa yesterday it was
revealed that about 2.4 million Kenyans are HIV-positive and 24,000 have AIDS, while in Nambia
last year 12,700 people were diagnosed with HIV bringing that country’s total HIV-positive
count to 53,300.

Various population control agencies, principally the United Nations Population Fund,
International Planned Parenthood and USAID are largely responsible for the spread of the
epidemic, charge population control critics, through the aggressive promotion of the West’s
liberalized sex culture in developing countries.

Despite the evidence that sexual promiscuity is the primary cause of the transmission of the
AIDS virus, and the link between condom distribution and increased promiscuity, population
control groups continue to push contraceptives and sterilization on often unwilling recipients.
Apart from the fact that promoting condom use encourages the behaviour by which AIDS is
transmitted, studies show that condoms slip or break at a rate of around 15 per cent. Also,
some authorities say that because the AIDS virus is so small, it can easily penetrate the
microscopic pores in the latex used in condoms.

In 1994 investigative reporters discovered that population control interest groups in the US
were funding Hilary Ngweno, publisher of the Weekly Review and a leading condom pusher and
advocate of permissive sexuality in Nairobi, Kenya.

According to a December 31, 1986 internal memorandum obtained from USAID, Ngweno received more
than US$100,000, which was given to him through a firm he heads by the name of Stellagraphics,
Ltd. “Schoolgirls not only need the knowledge about how their bodies function sexually, but
they also need the tools with which to protect themselves from the failure of society to
teach them to say no,” Ngweno wrote in a paper which evoked strong criticism from government
and religious leaders.

Ngweno conceded “the likelihood that the widespread use of condoms by teenagers would lead to
promiscuity,” but nonetheless insisted that “we cannot escape the responsibility demanded by
this greater imperative by simply continuing to hypocritically insist that our girls remain
virgins until marriage.”

The continuing radical commitment to promoting contraception and abortive devices in Africa in
place of messages like abstinence which respect community values in developing countries is
well established. The former UN forces commander in Rwanda, Canadian General Romeo Dallaire,
said on his return to Canada that military personnel referred to UN relief and other foreign
aid as “covering the country with rubber”. Tons of condoms and other contraceptives were being
distributed around the region in quantities far beyond what the population could use and in
place of much needed basic supplies such as food and medicine. Cutting the birthrate was
clearly the number one priority of the “aid” agencies.
NAIROBI, Kenya, Apr 15 (LSN) - In startling reports coming out of Africa yesterday it was
revealed that about 2.4 million Kenyans are HIV-positive and 24,000 have AIDS, while in Nambia
last year 12,700 people were diagnosed with HIV bringing that country’s total HIV-positive
count to 53,300.

Various population control agencies, principally the United Nations Population Fund,
International Planned Parenthood and USAID are largely responsible for the spread of the
epidemic, charge population control critics, through the aggressive promotion of the West’s
liberalized sex culture in developing countries.

Despite the evidence that sexual promiscuity is the primary cause of the transmission of the
AIDS virus, and the link between condom distribution and increased promiscuity, population
control groups continue to push contraceptives and sterilization on often unwilling recipients.
Apart from the fact that promoting condom use encourages the behaviour by which AIDS is
transmitted, studies show that condoms slip or break at a rate of around 15 per cent. Also,
some authorities say that because the AIDS virus is so small, it can easily penetrate the
microscopic pores in the latex used in condoms.

In 1994 investigative reporters discovered that population control interest groups in the US
were funding Hilary Ngweno, publisher of the Weekly Review and a leading condom pusher and
advocate of permissive sexuality in Nairobi, Kenya.

According to a December 31, 1986 internal memorandum obtained from USAID, Ngweno received more
than US$100,000, which was given to him through a firm he heads by the name of Stellagraphics,
Ltd. “Schoolgirls not only need the knowledge about how their bodies function sexually, but
they also need the tools with which to protect themselves from the failure of society to
teach them to say no,” Ngweno wrote in a paper which evoked strong criticism from government
and religious leaders.

Ngweno conceded “the likelihood that the widespread use of condoms by teenagers would lead to
promiscuity,” but nonetheless insisted that “we cannot escape the responsibility demanded by
this greater imperative by simply continuing to hypocritically insist that our girls remain
virgins until marriage.”

The continuing radical commitment to promoting contraception and abortive devices in Africa in
place of messages like abstinence which respect community values in developing countries is
well established. The former UN forces commander in Rwanda, Canadian General Romeo Dallaire,
said on his return to Canada that military personnel referred to UN relief and other foreign
aid as “covering the country with rubber”. Tons of condoms and other contraceptives were being
distributed around the region in quantities far beyond what the population could use and in
place of much needed basic supplies such as food and medicine. Cutting the birthrate was
clearly the number one priority of the “aid” agencies.