News, 13 June 2000
A columnist in the Daily Express newspaper in Britain has praised the
Family Planning Association's new booklet on abortion for "taking the
hysteria out of the debate, coolly calling the 'unborn child' a
foetus". Jenni Murray claimed that "anti-abortionists had had free
access to young minds for too long". [Daily Express, 13 June]
The Catholic archbishop of Chicago has said that the Catholic Church
would rather close its hospitals than accept new laws requiring them to
offer abortions. Cardinal Francis George, who was addressing a
committee meeting at the American Medical Association's annual
convention, said that "effectively, the AMA is being asked to help
abolish Catholic hospitals". The committee was considering whether to
refer to the convention's full house of delegates a proposal made by a
group of California doctors to require hospitals to offer "a full range
of reproductive services". These would include sterilisations and birth
control. If adopted as AMA policy, Catholic hospitals may lose federal
funding if they continue to refuse to offer such services. The proposal
does not explicitly mention abortion, but the Catholic Health
Association has warned that this is entailed by the language used.
[Chicago Tribune, 12 June]
In an address to the new French ambassador to the Vatican, Pope John
Paul II has stressed "the right to existence and to respect for life".
He said that the elderly should be able to live in decent conditions,
and "benefit from treatments and the necessary assistance until the end
of their natural existence". [Zenit news agency, Vatican City, 12 June]
A study reported in the American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse has
claimed that women who have abortions are five times more likely to
turn to drug abuse than women who carry to term. Dr David Reardon and
Dr Philip Ney had analysed data on 700 women aged 24 to 44, and
concluded that each year in the United States alone there are at least
150,000 new cases of abortion-related substance abuse. The same report
also referred to a study carried out in Finland which suggested that
abortion can lead to self-destructive or suicidal tendencies. It
claimed that women who have abortions are then six times more likely to
commit suicide and four times more likely to die in an accident.
[Cincinnati Right to Life newsletter, June/July 2000]
Stockwell Day, one of the main contenders for the leadership of the
Canadian Alliance [Canada's opposition political party], said last week
that he wanted to "see the legal protection of all innocent human life
in Canada". The top three candidates for the job have all stated that
they personally oppose abortion. Canadian pro-abortionists have warned
that they will vigorously oppose any moves to bring abortion back onto
the political agenda. Marilyn Wilson, executive director of the
Canadian Abortion Rights League, said: "Now that reproductive rights
are under threat again, I think you'll see us coming out very, very
strongly. We'll be ready." [Times Colonist, 10 June; from Pro-Life
E-News]
A feature in an American newspaper has described how China is imposing
its one-child family policy in occupied Tibet, entailing forced
abortions and sterilisations. Cheryl Daen also claimed that the
procedures are being performed without proper facilities and in
unhygienic conditions. She added that abortion is deeply offensive to
devout Buddhists, who revere all life forms and especially human life.
[The Daily Aztec, San Diego State University, 12 June; on Excite news]
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