News, 1 August 2000
The Irish attorney general has said that changing the law to allow
abortion in cases of rape would be unworkable. Mr Michael McDowell, who
was criticised by the UN Human Rights Committee in Geneva earlier this
month for Ireland's ban on all abortions except to save the mother's
life, said that it would be impossible to distinguish between a false
and genuine claim of rape in time for an abortion to be carried out. He
also warned that making rape the means of access to abortion would
result in a series of false accusations of rape. He said: "It might be
thought that there would be a temptation to characterise sexual
intercourse on an occasion giving rise to pregnancy as nonconsensual
with a view to availing of that right." [The Irish Times & CWNews,
31 July]
George W Bush yesterday received the official nomination of the
Republican party to contest the US presidential election in November.
Mr Bush's name was put forward unopposed on the first day of the
party's national convention and opinion polls suggest that he currently
enjoys a lead over Al Gore, his main rival for the presidency, of
between five and 12 percentage points. On Friday, the Republican
party's platform committee voted to maintain the strong anti-abortion
language in its official policy statement, despite the efforts of a
vocal pro-abortion minority. The panel voted by 10 votes to 3 against
an attempt to throw out all statements concerning abortion, and by 11
to 3 against an amendment expressing "recognition and respect" for both
sides of the abortion debate. As it stands, the platform maintains the
right to life of unborn children without any exceptions, and calls for
a constitutional amendment to ensure this. [Metro, 1 August; Pro-Life
Infonet, 30 July; Associated Press, 27 July]
The government of Nicaragua is considering moves to grant unborn babies
legal protection and to abolish the current provisions which permit
abortion when the health or life of the mother is thought to be at
risk. These provisions are said to have been exploited by women's
centres which provide abortions and are funded from abroad. Nicaragua,
which earlier this year instituted an annual national day of the
unborn, has been told by the pro-abortion United Nations Population
Fund that aid to the country will be stopped if family planning
programmes continued to contain what it termed "discrepancies".
Nicaraguan government ministers have publicly rejected UN reproductive
health programmes which entail access to abortion. [LifeSite Daily
News, 28 July]
Australia's prime minister has announced that his government will
attempt to overturn the federal court ruling [reported in yesterday's
digest] which threw out bans imposed on single women receiving in-vitro
fertilisation treatment. The ruling stated that the bans passed by two
Australian states contravened the Sex Discrimination Act, but Prime
Minister John Howard proposed an amendment to the Act such that it
would allow individual states to express the wishes of their
communities on such a matter. The federal government itself has no
constitutional power to legislate on IVF. [Sydney Morning Herald, 1
August]
Police in Iran have arrested five workers at an illegal abortion centre
after receiving complaints from local people. The five employees were
accused of "wilful interruption of pregnancy" and their facility,
located in the central province of Isfahan, was dismantled. Iran has
banned all abortions, except to save the mother's life, since the
Islamic revolution in 1979. [Sri Lankan Sunday Observer, 30 July]
A judge in Anchorage has given the US state of Alaska 90 days to start
funding the abortions of poor women. The state's policy of providing
medical care for poor pregnant women who continue with their
pregnancies but not for those who seek abortions was ruled
discriminatory and unconstitutional in March 1999. Now the state has
been told to pay 17 months of outstanding claims. The state legislature
had voted to bar all abortion payments except in cases of rape, incest
or danger to the mother's life. [Associated Press, 28 July]
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