News, 20 April 2000
Concerns have been raised in Washington that US aid is still being used
for coercive sterilisation programmes. Congress passed legislation in
1998 blocking US aid to overseas governments which force women to be
sterilised, have abortions or use contraceptives, but Todd Tiahrt, the
congressman who moved the legislation, is now alleging that Peru is
again coercing women to have sterilisations or in some cases even
abortions without their consent. USAID, the government agency,
currently spends 11 per cent of its aid to Peru on family planning and
related programmes. [Associated Press, 19th April]
The United States supreme court will begin considering Nebraska's
partial-birth abortion ban on Tuesday (25 April) in a case which will
have major implications for similar bans in 26 other states. The
Clinton administration has urged the Nebraska law to be struck down,
and the president has himself twice vetoed such bans passed by
Congress. Congress passed another ban on the procedure last week, but
not by a sufficient margin to bypass another presidential veto.
[Gannett News Service, 18th April (from Pro-Life Infonet)]
Pro-life chains will be formed in 90 cities, towns and villages across
Great Britain on Saturday 29 April to commemorate in silent vigil the
5.5 million unborn children killed since the 1967 Abortion Act came
into force. The Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, which is
organising the annual event, hopes that 20,000 people will participate
and build on last year's success when hundreds of thousands of people
witnessed the chains.
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