Answer:
At the 1994 Cairo Conference on Population and Development, Christian and Muslim representatives took very strong positions on health care for women, justice in economic development, and education.
Step-by-step explanation:
The 1994 Cairo Conference on Population and Development was a UN-sponsored summit on world population issues. There, some 20,000 delegates, including then-US President Bill Clinton, advised other governments, UN agencies and non-governmental organizations on a variety of topics, including immigration, infant mortality, family planning, women empowerment and protection for women from unsafe abortion. Representatives of the 179 governments present adopted an action program in Cairo, which put human reproductive health and reproductive rights at the center of population policy. The program envisaged access to sexuality education, contraception and family planning, protection against HIV and AIDS, and health care related to pregnancy and childbirth by 2014.