News, 19 July 2000
The British Pregnancy Advisory Service has announced that it arranged
abortions in Britain for 2,460 Irish women last year. 12 of these were
under 16, while 933 were aged between 20 and 24. The figures were
released jointly by the BPAS and the Irish Family Planning Association,
which claimed that many Irish women give false British addresses when
seeking abortions in England. [The Times, 19 July] This digest reported
in June that provisional figures released by the Office for National
Statistics had indicated that in fact 6,214 women from the Irish
Republic had abortions in England in 1999, or about 120 every week.
[Irish Times, 7 June]
Priests for Life, an American pro-life group, has begun an advertising
campaign aimed at highlighting the importance of abortion as an issue
for voters. The group, which has 6,000 priests as members, will spend
between 250,000 and a million US dollars on the television and
newspaper advertisements, starting with a full page in today's New York
Times. The advertisements will not mention specific candidates, but
will be targeted in areas where local Catholic politicians have voted
in favour of abortion. Such politicians will be told to "stop being a
scandal to the Gospel of Jesus Christ". Fr Frank Pavone, national
director of the group, said: "Voters are free to elect whom they
choose. But to be free, one has to be informed of the implications of
one's choice, including the moral and spiritual implications." [The
Nando Times, 19 July]
Following on from the decision by the US Supreme Court to throw out
Nebraska's partial-birth abortion ban, a federal judge has permanently
barred Florida from enforcing its own ban signed by the governor last
May. Meanwhile, Jim Ryan, the attorney general of Illinois, has
regretfully acknowledged that his state's ban can no longer be
defended. Nora O'Callaghan, director of the Archdiocese of Chicago's
Respect Life office, commented that the wording of the Supreme Court
judgement made any new legislation very problematic. "[It's] really
difficult to figure out how an effective law can be passed," she said.
[News-Journal online, 13 July; Pro-Life Infonet, 18 July]
The results of a questionnaire have indicated that 49 percent of
delegates to the Republican National Convention in the US could support
a vice-presidential nominee who favours abortion. Tom Ridge,
pro-abortion governor of Pennsylvania, is the favourite among the
delegates, although Elizabeth Dole, who opposes abortion, came a close
second in the poll. [The Dallas Morning News, 19 July]
A former Canadian prime minister has said that he is both Catholic and
pro-abortion. Joe Clark, leader of the Progressive Conservative Party,
disclosed that he is an active Catholic but also pro-choice and went on
to say, "I, and thousands and thousands and thousands of other
Catholics support a woman's right to choose." [CWNews, 18 July]
Human Life International has released a pro-life library resource on
compact disc. The library, which is the first of its kind, contains
more than 10,000 documents totalling more than 100 million words, 2 and
a half times more than the Encyclopaedia Britannica. The CD is the work
of Dr Brian Clowes, Human Life International's research director. [HLI,
7 July] HLI's website can be accessed at http://www.hli.org
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