News, 22 August 2002
Sainsbury's, a British supermarket chain, has confirmed that its stores
are providing the abortifacient morning-after pill free of charge to
young teenage girls. Just over a month after Tesco, another supermarket
chain, announced that it was abandoning its own involvement in a
government initiative to distribute the drug free of charge to
teenagers, Sainsbury's confirmed that five of its stores in South
Wales, Greater Manchester and Bristol had entered into partnerships
with local health authorities to make the morning-after pill available
to girls under 16. In a letter to the Life charity, Sainsbury's chief
executive Sir Peter Davis wrote: "We feel it is a responsibility to
offer choice to our customers. We don't feel that it is right for us to
tell our customers what they should or shouldn't buy, or indeed how
they should or shouldn't act." Both Life and SPUC have strongly
criticised Sainsbury's for the move and have pledged to campaign
against the provision of morning-after pills to children by
Sainsbury's, just as they did successfully with respect to Tesco. [
SPUC media release, 22 August; Daily Mail, 22 August]
Australia's Capital Territory (ACT) has become the first part of the
country formally to decriminalise abortion. The ACT's assembly
yesterday approved legislation by nine votes to eight which removed
abortion from the Crimes Act. The legislation also repealed a former
law which had required women to receive information and undergo a
48-hour cooling off period before an abortion. Another bill
establishing positive statutory regulation of abortion was passed by 11
votes to six. Abortion is already widely available throughout
Australia, although outside ACT it remains a criminal act which is
allowed on the basis of certain legal precedents or liberal statutory
definitions. [
The Australian,
Canberra Times and
Daily Telegraph, 22 August]
The first adult in the UK to receive a blood transplant rich in stem
cells from a baby's umbilical cord to treat leukaemia has returned home
from hospital and is making good progress. Stephen Knox from Darlington
in north-east England underwent chemotherapy and radiotherapy to kill
off his own bone marrow, and then received an injection of mixed cord
blood. The stem cells started to grow into new bone marrow within 15
days of the injection. [
icNewcastle, 22 August]
Obtaining stem cells from umbilical cord blood is an ethical
alternative to the destructive extraction of stem cells from embryos.
Three groups representing women and doctors have filed documents
with the US Food and Drug Administration calling for the distribution
of RU-486 to be suspended pending a full review of its safety.
Concerned Women for America, the Christian Medical Association and the
American Association of Pro Life Obstetricians and Gynecologists
presented an official 90-page "citizens' petition" based on 22 months
of research which outlined significant health and safety concerns
associated with the RU-486 abortion drug, also known as Mifeprex. Since
RU-486 was licensed in the USA in September 2000, it has been blamed
for two adult deaths and serious health complications in other woman
such as haemorrhaging, infections and heart attacks. [
Washington Times, 22 August;
LifeSite, 21 August]
An Australian cabinet minister has argued strongly against the
legislation to authorise destructive stem cell research on human
embryos currently being debated in parliament. Mr Tony Abbott said that
the subjects of embryo research could not answer back, and likened it
to euthanasia insofar as both involved deliberate killing. He said: "At
the very least, it seems to me that the embryo is worthy of respect...
it cannot be treated with no more respect than a laboratory rat
destined to be sacrificed for the sake of science." [
News.com.au, 21 August]
The Roman Catholic Church in the Philippines has warned politicians not
to promote population control programmes. Archbishop Orlando Quevedo,
president of the country's bishops' conference, said that political
candidates who supported the use of artificial birth control methods
[many of which can be abortifacient] would face a backlash from voters
at the next election in 2004. 60 members of the national legislature
recently called on the government to establish a population control
programme and ensure "reproductive rights", although President Gloria
Attoyo has insisted that her government will only promote natural
family planning. [AFP, 18 August; news digests for
9 August 2002 and
6 February 2001]
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