News, 28 December 2000
The Roman Catholic bishops of Scotland have condemned the
morning-after pill because it can induce an early abortion. In a
pastoral letter to the country's Catholics, the bishops criticised the
decision by the British government to make the drug available from
pharmacists and observed that it can prevent a newly conceived human
embryo from implanting in his or her mother's womb. The bishops
affirmed: "In this case it is a form of early abortion. The Church
cannot remain silent on this issue, given the gravity of what is being
proposed. In stating these simple facts, the Church is not seeking to
impose its judgement on others. Rather we aim to propose for public
consideration the truth about these drugs and their effects." [
BBC
News online, 27 December 2000;
EWTN News, 28 December 2000]
The National Pharmaceutical Association in the UK has announced that
the abortifacient morning-after pill will not be nationally available
from pharmacists without prescription until the end of next month. The
British government plans to reclassify the morning-after pill as a
drug available from pharmacists to women over 16 without prescription
from next Monday. Paul Tully, general secretary of SPUC, welcomed the
delay as "a chance to rethink an irresponsible and potentially
disastrous change to social policy". Mr Tully continued: "This is a
breathing space during which we shall seek to raise public awareness
of this potent drug. It is an abuse of medicine and it encourages the
abuse of women." [
SPUC media release, 27 December 2000]
Pope John Paul II has linked violence in the Holy Land and Indonesia
to abortion and euthanasia as components of the same culture of death.
In his traditional Christmas
Urbi et Orbi address, the Pope said
that abortion and euthanasia were "alarming signs of the culture of
death, which pose a serious threat for the future". Turning to
euthanasia in particular, he observed: "The temptation is becoming
ever stronger to take possession of death by anticipating its arrival,
as though we were masters of our own lives or the lives of others."
[Zenit news agency, 25 December 2000]
Researchers in England have developed a new way of preventing
miscarriages by killing potential miscarriage victims before they are
implanted inside their mothers' wombs. Doctors at Guy's and St
Thomas's hospitals in London have revealed a new technique for
screening out embryos with so-called chromosomal translocations using
in vitro fertilisation technology [pre-implantation genetic
diagnosis]. Women who carry the genetic anomaly which leads to
so-called chromosomal translocations, which are thought to cause
thousands of miscarriages each year, can choose to generate embryos in
a test-tube and then accept only those who are most likely to be born
healthy. [
The Sunday Times, 24 December 2000]
Gerhard Schröder, the German chancellor, has been widely criticised
after he urged a review of the country's laws banning embryo
experimentation. Mr Schröder refused to rule out research on cloned
human embryos, insisting that it would be irresponsible to wear
"ideological blinkers". He warned that Germany could fall behind other
countries and "be forced to import what is banned here". It is
reported that his comments were criticised by opposition politicians,
church leaders and eminent scientists. [
Daily Telegraph, 27 December]
A federal appeals court in the United States has reinstated an
abortion clinic buffer zone law in Massachusetts which was deemed
unconstitutional by a lower court last month [see
news digest for 21
November]. The lower court had decided that the law infringed the
right to free speech of pro-life demonstrators, but the 1st US Circuit
Court of Appeals judged that a perceived threat to public safety
outweighed other concerns. The buffer zone law can now be enforced
while its constitutionality is considered further. [
AP, via Yahoo!
News, 22 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