@Gendo - That's good to know, at least.
Found this: "A 2003 analysis found that the rule leads to unsafe abortions, which are the second-leading cause of death for women of reproductive age in Ethiopia and account for more than 40 percent of the maternal mortality rate in Kenya. Peru has one of the highest maternal mortality rates in Latin America, in part because of its high rate of clandestine abortions. ... The gag rule would deny US funding to any international organization that mentions abortion as an option for women seeking help with an unwanted pregnancy—even if that organization largely provides contraception or more general reproductive health care. ... Marie Stopes International, one of USAID's biggest family planning partners, estimates that the global gag rule will lead to an additional 2.2 million abortions worldwide."
http://www.motherjones.com/politics/201 ... l-gag-rule
I think they're one of the places that you can donate to, although they'd be among those banned from providing services, which makes donations meaningless in this context. I'm not sure if there are groups fighting against the ban that could be supported.
This ban will likely also increase the number of late-term abortions, whereby there's a higher likelihood of the fetus being conscious and/or able to experience pain, including some almost guaranteed infanticide, vs when they're a small clump of unthinking cells and it's no more murder than mixing a jar of egg and sperm together and then flushing it down the loo. I don't know how anyone thought this was a good idea at all, especially not if they are concerned about fetal suffering and want to reduce abortion.
Someone else mentioned that a lot of women seeking abortion in those places have been raped and can barely support themselves, let alone a child, which makes it worse. They're almost definitely going to abort either way, and it's best they don't die while doing so.
I don't know how effective the ban is, though - if it's been done before as you say, perhaps organisations have found ways of getting around it.