News, 17 July 2000
The Oireachtas committee on the constitution has concluded its public
hearings on the abortion issue in Ireland with submissions from groups
in favour of abortion. Last Wednesday, members of the Cork Women's
Right to Choose Group called for abortion on request up to the twelfth
week of pregnancy, and a three-member delegation from Catholics for a
Free Choice (CFFC) supported the seventh option listed on the green
paper, which would permit abortion for economic or social reasons. The
American National Conference of Catholic Bishops had contacted the
committee to insist that CFFC did not speak for the Catholic Church and
distorted its teachings. [The Irish Times online, 13 July]
Earlier in the month an Islamic submission to the Oireachtas committee
had insisted that abortion should be forbidden in all cases except when
the mother's life was in danger. Mr Arif Fitzsimon, spokesman for the
Islamic Cultural Centre in Ireland, said that a threat of suicide by
the mother should not be sufficient reason for abortion. The delegation
stressed that every innocent life should be protected, and so abortion
could not be justified in cases either of rape or foetal abnormality.
Sheikh Halawa, another member of the Islamic delegation, was asked for
his view in the case of a baby being born without a brain with only 24
hours to live. He replied: "If the doctors say that he will only live
24 hours he still has the right to these 24 hours." [The Irish Times, 6
July]
News that a male contraceptive pill could be on sale within five years
has met with a warning from the Roman Catholic Church in Scotland that
it would lead to more unplanned pregnancies and abortions. A spokesman
observed that these had been the result of the "contraceptive morality"
which took hold after the introduction of the female contraceptive
pill, and added that "the advent of the male pill will be another step
in that direction." [BBC News online, 17 July]
A writer whose book in the 1980s concluded that severe post-abortion
trauma does not exist has acknowledged that abortion is nevertheless a
painful and upsetting experience. Angela Neustatter, writing in The
Guardian, said that she had faced no moral dilemma in deciding to have
an abortion herself, but observed: "... what I had not reckoned with
was the immense sadness and sense of profound failure I would feel
afterwards, nor the continuing regret that makes me wish the choice
could have been otherwise." Angela Neustatter remains a commit ted
pro-abortionist and makes her point to warn other so-called
pro-choicers against presenting abortion as an easy choice. [The
Guardian, 17 July]
The co-ordinator of Cardinal Winning's Pro-Life Initiative in Glasgow,
Scotland, has described the fact that public bodies refuse to give any
financial support to women who wish to keep their babies as a
"scandal". Sister Roseann Reddy spoke of the pressure put on women to
have abortions when "instantly pregnancy is seen as a problem and the
solution is abortion". She wrote: "We work closely with family planning
and social services, but although they can give unlimited contraception
and abortion provision, they don't have a single resource to help women
choosing to keep their babies." [Catholic World News, 14 July]
The Catholic bishops of Canada have criticised the government's
decision to permit clinical trials of the RU-486 abortion pill. Bishop
Gerald Wiesner, president of the country's bishops' conference, wrote
to the health minister to stress that the Church has "consistently and
strongly opposed" the introduction of the drug. He noted that the trial
involving 1,000 women would result in the destruction of 1,000 human
beings, and added that the promotion of abortion was an offence against
the "profound sensitivities and religious beliefs of people throughout
the country". The bishop said that society should support women in need
rather than promoting abortion. [Zenit news agency, Toronto, 14
July]
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