News, 15 August 2000
The mayor of Mexico City has approved a proposal to liberalise the
city's abortion laws. Under the new provisions, abortion would remain
illegal in most cases but the range of exceptions would be expanded to
include a threat to the health of the mother and the detection of
serious foetal abnormalities, as well as the current exception for
rape. Mayor Rosario Robles signed the proposal yesterday, although it
still has to be approved by the city's legislature. The move comes only
days after the legislature of Guanajuato, another Mexican state, voted
to eliminate its only exception to a complete ban on abortion.
Following much criticism, Ramon Martin Huerta, the successor of
newly-elected Mexican president Vincente Fox as governor of Guanajuato,
has refused to endorse the measure in its original form and has called
for further consultations. [BBC News online, 15 August; Washington
Post, 14 August; LA Times, Hispanic Vista, 11 August]
A Catholic hospital in the USA has been criticised by the local
archbishop after its ethical committee recommended the withdrawal of
hydration and nutrition from a patient considered to be in a so-called
persistent vegetative state. Steve Becker, aged 29, had not regained
consciousness following an operation last February. Mr Becker's wife
agreed to the withdrawal of the tube supplying food and water, despite
the fact that Mr Becker himself had refused to sign any document
consenting to this beforehand. His mother and aunts then secured a
court order to continue the tube feeding, but the hospital is not now
providing him with antibiotics despite an infection and he is unlikely
to survive until the next court hearing in September. Archbishop Justin
Rigali of St Louis issued a statement in July insisting that all
patients had a right to food and water, and last Friday an editorial in
the archdiocesan newspaper rejected "any course of action that leaves a
patient susceptible to death through lack of care..." [Zenit news
agency, 14 August]
Australian scientists have claimed to have successfully completed all
the major steps involved in so-called therapeutic cloning using a
mouse. Professor Alan Trounson, of the Monash Institute of Reproduction
and Development in Melbourne, said that his research demonstrated that
the same technique could realistically be applied to human beings. A
committee of the Australian House of Representatives is currently
considering the issue of so-called therapeutic cloning. Meanwhile the
Donaldson Committee is expected to recommend permitting research into
the cloning of human beings in Britain tomorrow. [BBC News online, 14
August]
The New York Post has reported that a leading abortionist in the US, Dr
Martin Haskell, has donated 250 dollars to Hillary Clinton's election
campaign. Douglas Johnson, legislative director of the National Right
to Life Committee, observed: "Martin Haskell, the king of partial-birth
abortion, whose surgical scissors have punctured more babies' skulls
than any other doctor in the United States, knows who will defend his
interests in the US Senate." [New York Post, 14 August; from Pro-Life
E-News]
Pro-life television advertisements which urge women to have second
thoughts before having an abortion are to be shown in Los Angeles,
California, this week. The advertisements, which were launched in
Philadelphia last month, show how things might have been for one woman
who had an abortion if she had instead chosen to keep her child.
Feelings of emptiness would have been replaced by the wonderful joys of
motherhood. [Concerned Women for America, from Pro-Life E-News, 11
August] The advertisement can be viewed in full at
http://cwfa.org/secondthoughts
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