News, 22 February 2000
The archbishop-elect of Westminster has been quoted as saying that
abortion is "always an evil", even in the case of rape-victims and
pregnant 12-year-olds. Bishop Cormac Murphy-O'Connor said he also felt
compassion for people facing difficulties. [The Herald and Metro, 21
February 2000]
Members of the US Senate will probably vote next month on
Representative Charles Canady's Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act.
Senators passed the same bill 63-34 last year but President Clinton
vetoed it. This type of abortion procedure involves the baby's being
partially delivered and then having scissors pushed into the base of
his or her neck, and having his or her brain sucked out.
The chairman of the House of Commons pharmacy group is expected to call
on the British government to allow the morning-after pill to be
supplied without prescription. In Scotland women are being encouraged
to get a prescription for the morning-after pill to keep in case they
need it one day. [The Independent, 20 February, 2000]
More than two fifths of those who voted in Saturday's South Carolina
presidential primary election believe abortion is the key campaign
issue. [The Guardian, 21 February 2000]
A woman who narrowly avoided dying from a blood clot on the brain wants
women considering taking the contraceptive pill to be warned of the
dangers. Mrs Tracey Barkess of County Durham, England, was only saved
from death by a hole in her heart which meant that the clot caused a
stroke instead. Mrs Barkess' family blame the pill for the clot since
she was on no other medication. [Northern Echo, February 2000]
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