News, 15 August 2002
A British government minister has cited the "appalling symbolism" in
the deaths of two unborn children in a terrorist bomb attack in
Northern Ireland fours years ago. The bomb planted in Omagh by
Republican terrorists killed 31 people, including two unborn children,
although the unborn victims were not counted in the official death
toll. Mr Des Browne, the UK government minister for criminal justice,
victims and human rights in Northern Ireland, told a conference in
Londonderry that the deaths of the two unborn children were
particularly symbolic of the fact that the terrorists were trying "to
destroy the future". [
NI Office online, 15 August; see
digest for 20 September 2000]
Abortion remains illegal in Northern Ireland, but more than 500 unborn
children are killed in legal abortions every day in the rest of the UK.
A prominent member of Afghanistan's interim government has issued
a stern warning to anyone such as Marie Stopes International (MSI) or
the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) who may be intending to
distribute morning-after pills or perform illegal surgical abortions
inside Afghanistan. The warning referred explicitly to carrying or
distributing morning-after pills in Afghanistan, which was said to be
an offence punishable by up to seven years in prison. MSI opened its
first clinic in Afghanistan last Saturday. While MSI and UNFPA have not
said if they will be providing abortifacient methods of birth control
or surgical abortions in the country, it is known that morning-after
pills and late term surgical abortions were being provided in Afghan
refugee camps inside Pakistan. [SPUC & PRI, 13 August]
A woman in Kinshasa has given birth to the first born-alive baby
to have been created by IVF treatment in the Democratic Republic of
Congo (DRC). The DRC now becomes the third sub-Saharan country, behind
South Africa and Cameroon, where IVF treatment has been carried out
successfully. [
BBC News online, 14 August]
Dominic Baster of SPUC commented: "The reality is that IVF treatment
entails a hugely disproportionate risk to the lives of the unborn
children created in the process. For this reason, the establishment of
an IVF programme is not an advance for the Congolese people but,
rather, a step backwards towards a society which commodifies human life
and sacrifices its youngest members."
A federal judge in America has ruled that the US Navy must pay for
the late-term abortion of a severely handicapped unborn child whose
father is a Navy worker. The baby has allegedly been diagnosed with
anencephaly, a condition whereby all or most of the brain fails to
develop. The Navy's health contractor had refused to pay for the
abortion on the basis that a 1985 federal law prohibits the use of
Department of Defense money for abortions unless the mother's life is
endangered. However, a judge in Seattle ruled that the Navy's decision
in this case was illegal because the unborn child could not even be
considered a potential life. [
Seattle Times, 13 August] Anencephalic babies can survive for hours, days or even longer after being born.
A couple who want to have the world's first cloned born-alive baby and
the doctor who is helping them have defended their plans on CNN, an
American television station. Dr Panayiotis Zavos acknowledged that the
procedure was risky but insisted that the public would come round to
the idea. Bill, the husband of Cathy who is seeking to be the first
woman to give birth to a clone of herself, said on the programme:
"We're on the cutting edge and the beginning of a brave new world....
But we're not going to give birth to a monster or an abnormal child. If
there is a serious abnormality we will abort." [
The Scotsman and
Sydney Morning Herald, 14 August]
The inspector general of the District of Columbia in the US has
recommended that disciplinary action should be taken against an
emergency medical services supervisor whose advice allegedly led three
pregnant students to have abortions. Samanthia M Robinson is said to
have told a class of trainee emergency medical technicians in March
last year that they would be fired if they became pregnant. However,
D.C. law explicitly prohibits discrimination based on pregnancy. The US
Attorney's Office declined to prosecute Miss Robinson, citing a lack of
evidence of criminal intent. [
The Washington Times, 13 August]
The annual convention of the American Bar Association (ABA), the
largest lawyers' group in the US, has passed a resolution opposing a
legal ban on human cloning. The resolution was passed yesterday by a
voice vote, and no member spoke against it. Cathleen Cleaver Esq., a
spokesman for the American Catholic bishops' pro-life secretariat, said
that the ABA, which has an official position in favour of abortion, had
"once again positioned itself against life". [US Conference of Catholic
Bishops, 14 August, via Pro-Life Infonet]
The leader of the Orthodox Church in America, an independent
church within the Eastern Orthodox communion, has condemned abortion as
a violation of the biblical commandment against killing. Speaking in
Alaska, Metropolitan Herman included the inadmissibility of abortion
among those tenets which must be followed because they were established
by Christ and his church. [
Anchorage Daily News, 14 August; other sources]
The results of a large-scale American study published in the American
Journal of Orthopsychiatry have suggested that women are 63% more
likely to receive mental health care within 90 days of an abortion than
within 90 days of delivering a live baby. Researchers led by Dr
Priscilla Coleman examined the medical records of 173,000 low-income
women in California, excluding all women who had received any
psychiatric care within a year prior to their "pregnancy outcome". [
US Newswire, 15 August; via Northern Light]
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, 2010