News, 12 April 2000
A man who drove through a red traffic-light after drinking, and
collided with a pregnant woman killing her unborn child of 36 weeks has
walked free, sentenced only to 120 hours' community service.
Magistrates in North Avon, UK, were advised that English law does not
recognise the life of a child until it has taken its first breath and
so the child's death could not be taken as a separate offence. The
child, posthumously named Thomas, was born dead three hours after the
crash. [The Times, 8th April]
There have been 32 new clauses and 48 amendments tabled so far with
respect to the Medical Treatment (Prevention of Euthanasia) Bill, which
has its report stage in the British House of Commons this Friday (14th
April). Most of those tabling amendments have voted for pro-euthanasia
legislation in the past, or have shown their opposition to the Bill in
other ways. Paul Tully, general secretary of the Society for the
Protection of Unborn Children, commented: " We must question why these
amendments were not tabled at committee stage, where they could have
been debated in detail. As it is, by tabling such an array of
amendments at report stage, it means that either there will not be time
to discuss them to the satisfaction of the pro-euthanasia lobby, or MPs
will be prevented from completing the report stage of the Bill on
Friday." It will be the first Bill to come before the House and
proceedings will start at 9.30 am.
The National Office of Statistics in Great Britain has released figures
which show that 101,000 teenagers became pregnant in 1998, a rise of
nearly 6,000 from the year before. Nearly half of them were under 18,
and 8,430 were under 16. Furthermore, a greater number of teenagers
chose to have abortions than ever before, with 42% choosing to do so in
1998 compared with 40.6% in 1997. Nearly 53% were under 16, compared
with 49.7% in 1997. Pro-life groups blamed the Government and family
planning organisations for continuing to push failed policies and
referring more and more girls for abortions, but others called for
better and younger sex education in schools. [The Catholic Herald, 7th
April]
Students in at least 150 state-supported schools in the USA will mark
the second annual day of remembrance on Friday (14 April) by
distributing pro-life literature to their peers with the message "It
could have been you". The event, initiated last year by the Freedom to
Learn Foundation, is designed to increase awareness among the young
about abortion and the fact that 38 million abortions have been carried
out in the USA since the Roe versus Wade decision in 1973. [Freedom to
Learn, 10th April (from Pro-Life Infonet)]
A British Government survey of around 500 young people aged 13 to 24
has found that many young women feel pressurised by men into having sex
before they are ready and find it difficult to negotiate the use of
contraception. [Metro, 12th April]
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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, 2012