News, 19 December 2000
The British House of Commons will vote on the government's statutory
instrument which would authorise research on cloned embryos this
evening at 7
pm. From a pro-life perspective, this is the most
significant vote in the British parliament for years. The technology
spokesman for the Church of Scotland has joined the many voices which
have been raised against the proposals. Dr Donald Bruce said that the
new regulations would mean that human embryos would be treated with
less respect than animals. [
The Herald, 18 December]
The leader of the official parliamentary opposition in Great Britain
has tabled a motion calling on the government to withdraw its
statutory instrument which would make the abortifacient morning-after
pill available from pharmacists without prescription from the first of
next month. Mr William Hague's motion, known in parliamentary language
as a
prayer, has also been signed by the Conservative opposition's
chief whip and health spokesmen. Mr John Smeaton, national director of
SPUC, said: "We are greatly encouraged by the strong stand taken by
the opposition against the government's promotion of prescription-free
morning-after pills, which represents a particular danger to young
girls. We call upon MPs of all parties to sign today's motion." [
SPUC
media release, 19 December]
Two Church of England bishops have spoken out this week in favour of
both the morning-after pill and destructive research on cloned human
embryos. Rt Rev Tom Butler, Anglican bishop of Southwark, used the
Thought for the Day programme on the BBC's national Radio Four to say
that the morning-after pill could be seen as something good. He
observed: "Ends don't justify means but they are a consideration.
Unwanted teenage pregnancies are a great evil which blight lives." Rt
Rev Richard Harries, Anglican bishop of Oxford, wrote an article
entitled "Why we need to clone" in
The Tablet journal, explaining why
he supports destructive research on human embryos. He insists that
pre-implantation embryos should not be accorded the same rights or
status as human persons and that, therefore, it is acceptable to treat
them as means to an end. Even though they should be accorded a
"special status", the cleric argues that this could "be overridden by
other weighty considerations", specifically the "real therapeutic
possibilities" of cloning research. [
The Tablet, 16 December]
Official figures released by the Canadian federal statistics agency
have indicated that there were 110,331 abortions performed on women
resident in Canada during 1998. This total represents a decline of 1.2
percent from the year before. The Statistics Canada data indicates
that more than half of Canadian women who obtained abortions in 1998
were in their 20s, and that, on average, 27 women out of every 1,000
in their 20s had abortions. The province with the highest number of
abortions was Ontario (46,918) followed by Quebec (28,852) and then
British Columbia (15,689). Quebec had the highest abortion rate (19.38
per 1,000) while Prince Edward Island had the lowest rate (4.95 per
1,000). [
LifeSite Daily News and
Statistics Canada, 18 December]
The pro-abortion United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) has announced
that only two representatives of each non-governmental organisation
(NGO) will be allowed to participate at any one time during the
10-year review of the Convention on the Rights of the Child next year.
Pro-life lobbyists have claimed that the move has been designed
specifically to restrict their activities. They have pointed out that
the pro-abortion United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) organised a
conference in 1998 at which only six pro-life non-governmental organisations were allowed to
participate, out of a total of more than 800, after a quota was placed
on pro-life lobbyists. [CWNews and C-fam, via EWTN News, 18 December]
A Catholic bishop in the United States has condemned his country's
government for the way it promotes abortion overseas and treats unborn
human life at home. Bishop Paul S Loverde of Arlington likened the US
to ancient civilisations which practised human sacrifice, pointing out
that "Mexico in 1531 was ... one of the most technologically advanced
nations in the western hemisphere ... [where] it is estimated that
50,000 people a year, and one out of every five children born, were
sacrificed." [
LifeSite Daily News, 18 December]
The Californian nurse who was told to leave Nicaragua amid accusations
that she had committed illegal abortions [see
news digest for 15
December] has been allowed to stay by a Nicaraguan judge because she
had not received proper notification. It is reported that this
decision may be appealed. [
LifeSite Daily News, 18 December]
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