News, 21 January 2003
The European parliament's development committee adopted the
pro-abortion Sandbaek report this afternoon almost unanimously. In
order for the full parliament to be allowed a debate on the report and
to pass amendments, it was necessary for only four of the 63 committee
members to vote against the report. However, in the event only two
members voted against. Others abstained or were absent at the time of
the vote. This means that MEPs will only be able to vote on the entire
report next month.
John Smeaton, national director of SPUC, commented: "On account of
the fact that EU regulations take precedence over national law, all EU
member states will now be obliged to fund abortions overseas through
their EU contributions. This includes Ireland, which has a pro-life
constitution, as well as the pro-life accession countries such as Malta
and Poland when they become full EU members. We are deeply concerned by
this development because abortion law is not within the competence of
the European Union, but a pro-abortion agenda is being pushed through
without proper democratic scrutiny or informed debate." European
pro-lifers are being urged to ask their MEPs to vote against the report
in its entirety when it comes before the full parliament next month,
and to contact their national governments to urge ministers to do all
they can within the decision-making framework of the EU, particularly
in the council of ministers, to amend the regulation. [Euro-Fam and SPUC, 21 January]
A British member of the European parliament has called for the
legalisation of euthanasia. Chris Davies, a Liberal Democrat MEP for
the north-west of England, said that the law in the UK should be
changed because "after years of pain and suffering, to be allowed to
die with dignity should be the most fundamental human right of all". Mr
Davies made his comments after Reginald Crew from Liverpool killed
himself in an assisted suicide in Switzerland yesterday. The Crown
Prosecution Service has since confirmed that it is considering whether
criminal charges could be brought under the Suicide Act 1961 against
Mrs Crew and an ITV television team which allegedly helped Mr Crew to
travel to Switzerland. [
BBC News online and Daily Telegraph, 21 January]
Poland's prime minister has confirmed that no moves will be made to
liberalise the country's abortion law at least until after the next
parliamentary elections in 2005. Prime Minister Leszek Miller told a
Polish radio station yesterday that there was no majority in the Diet
[lower house of parliament] in favour of amending the law or of holding
a referendum on the issue. His comments came after the president voiced
his opposition to any change in the law on abortion [see
yesterday's digest].
Meanwhile, the Polish Catholic bishops have urged the government to add
a special clause to the country's European Union accession treaty to
safeguard Poland's laws against abortion and euthanasia. [
Zenit, 20 January;
EUobserver, 21 January]
The founder of the Raelian cult has apparently admitted that claims by
Clonaid to have produced born-alive cloned babies may be false.
Clonaid, a company with links to the Raelian cult, claims that two
cloned babies have so far been born, and that a third cloned child is
due to be born soon in Japan. However, Claude Vorilhon, also known as
Rael, welcomed the publicity achieved by the cloning claims and said:
"If it isn't true, it's the most beautiful scientific joke but, in any
case, it has allowed us to communicate our messages to the whole
planet." [
Ananova and
Zenit,
20 January] There has still been no independent corroboration of
Clonaid's claims, which have been received with much scepticism by
other experts.
Fr Frank Pavone, founder of the US group Priests for Life, has
remarked on how the scope of the pro-life campaign has expanded in the
30 years since Roe v Wade. In a message to mark the 30th anniversary
tomorrow of the US supreme court decision which declared a
constitutional right to abortion, Fr Pavone said: " Roe vs Wade is not
just a bad decision; it is a poison which seeps into our culture and
gives rise to many dangerous 'weeds' such as infanticide, destruction
of embryos in the name of research, the threat of cloning, etc." Fr
Pavone also noted that all life issues were interrelated. [
CNS, 17 January]
To subscribe to SPUC's email information services, please visit www.spuc.org.uk/em-signup. The reliability of the news herein is dependent on that of the cited sources, which are paraphrased rather than quoted. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the society. © Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, 2003