News, 26 July 2000
The US House of Representatives has unanimously passed a bill
prohibiting states from executing pregnant women. The Innocent Child
Protection Act, which bans the execution of pregnant women by any state
or federal authority, including the military, passed by 417 votes to
none. A law passed in 1994 banned federal executions of pregnant women,
and this new law extends the same principle to state executions. Vice
President Al Gore said last week that a pregnant woman on death-row
should have the right to decide whether to delay her execution until
her baby was born. [Associated Press, NRL, Pro-Life Infonet, 25 July]
A disabled man who appeared on television in New Zealand saying that he
wanted his ventilator turned off so that he could die has since changed
his mind and now wants to "give life a go". Brian Park, aged 32, was
left unable to move his arms or legs or breathe unaided as a result of
a truck accident earlier this year, and made his plea to be allowed to
die during the visit to his country of Dr Nitschke, the Australian
euthanasia campaigner. Mr Park's condition has now improved so that he
might be able to operate an electric wheelchair using a voice-activated
computer. [Humanity, New Zealand, July 2000]
A United Nations body has admitted that global food supplies are
predicted to grow faster than the world's population, contradicting the
arguments of population control advocates. The report, published by the
UN Food and Agriculture Organisation, said that the projected world
population of 8 billion in 2030 would in fact be better fed than
before. It stated: "Growth in agriculture will continue to outstrip
world population growth of 1.2 per cent up to 2015 and 0.8 per cent in
the period to 2030." [LifeSite Daily News, from a UN press release, 25
July]
In the US, both pro-life and pro-abortion Republicans have been
reacting to the news that George W Bush has chosen Dick Cheney as his
running mate. Alan Keyes, another candidate for the Republican
presidential nomination, had said that he would consider leaving the
Republican party if Bush appointed a running mate who supported
abortion, but now he intends to give Bush his support. Meanwhile
Roselyn O'Connell, president of the National Women's Political Caucus
and a pro-choice Republican, said she was very disappointed. She said:
"I think it sends a clear message ... that there is not going to be the
real option of getting the attention of Governor Bush in terms of
reproductive rights for women." [Associated Press, Reuters, NRL, 25
July; from Pro-Life Infonet]
The body which is managing Ted Turner's donation of one billion US
dollars to the United Nations is giving 21 million dollars to UN
agencies including the pro-abortion United Nations Population Fund
(UNFPA) to target adolescent girls in developing countries. During the
conflict in Bosnia, the UNFPA distributed kits to refugees containing
abortion apparatus and abortifacient drugs. [Reuters, Planet Ark, 25
July; LifeSite Daily News, 25 July]
Statistics published in a pro-life newspaper suggest that world bodies
over-emphasise so-called reproductive health at the expense of other
vital health issues including access to clean water. A sample from
figures issued by the UN in 1997 indicated that, whereas only 28
percent of Haitians had access to safe water, 81 percent had access to
contraception. In Uganda the figures were 34 percent and 82 percent
respectively, while in Vietnam 36 percent had access to safe water but
95 percent had access to contraception. [Humanity, New Zealand, July
2000]
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