News, 20 June 2000
The Northern Ireland legislative assembly is due to debate the abortion
issue today. Mr Jim Wells, a Democratic Unionist member for South Down,
said that the British government had hinted that it wants to extend the
1967 Abortion Act to Northern Ireland, even though "most Catholics and
Protestants find the idea of abortion morally wrong and abhorrent". Mr
Wells, who revealed that 79 out of 108 assembly members had signed a
petition backing his motion, said, "A heavy No vote in the assembly
will make it very, very difficult for government to even start this
process." [BBC News online, 20 June] [Abortion is presently illegal in
Northern Ireland, but responsibility for abortion legislation has been
reserved to the UK parliament in London.]
The British government has announced a campaign to persuade pregnant
women to stop smoking in a bid to cut miscarriages and stillbirths. It
is claimed that 400 children die in the UK every year before or shortly
after childbirth as a result of their mother's cigarette habit. The
initiative will cost 1 million British pounds and include a 'kick the
habit' telephone hotline. [Daily Mail, 20 June]
A baby who was very nearly aborted in Brazil received baptism yesterday
in Anapolis Cathedral, and her 15-year-old mother made her first Holy
Communion during the same service. Fabiana Silva had been raped and was
5 months pregnant when she requested an abortion. The pro-life movement
mobilised, the hospital received 30 telephone calls an hour as well as
faxes and e-mails, and eventually the doctor decided against the
abortion. Fabiana decided herself to keep the baby, and she and her
mother have been receiving much help from pro-life benefactors. The
baby boy is called Vitor (meaning victorious one) and Fabiana has not
even had to interrupt her studies. [Zenit news agency, Anapolis, 18
June]
A researcher into the effects of abortion on women has criticised the
American media for not covering the findings of a study funded by the
Finnish government [carried in SPUC's news digest on 13 June]. Dr David
Reardon said, "Even worse, abortion counsellors continue to lie to
American women. They are telling women that abortion is safer than
childbirth, when this and other irrefutable studies prove exactly the
opposite. The entire body of medical literature clearly shows that
abortion contributes to a decline in women's physical and mental
health." [Zenit news agency, Springfield, Il., 19 June] [Dr Reardon's
study, printed in the Post-Abortion Review, can be seen at
http://www2.famvid.com/dave12/PAR/V8/n2/finland.html ]
A member of the team that created Dolly, the first cloned sheep, has
admitted that expectations for the technology have been unfulfilled.
Professor Keith Campbell of Nottingham University, UK, said: "Cloning
is turning out to be very expensive and very inefficient." A report in
the current issue of Science magazine claims that even after cloned
embryos are implanted in a surrogate mother's womb, only two in 100 are
successfully born. [Daily Express, 19 June] Meanwhile, scientists in
China have announced that the first goat to be cloned from an adult
cell has died only 36 hours after being born. Professor Zhang Yong of
Northwest University, Xian, China, said: "The death means that cloning
technology leaves much room for improvement." [BBC News online, 19 June]
The American Medical Association has agreed on a softened version of
the resolution which Catholics had feared would mean their hospitals'
being forced to offer various reproductive services. The House of
Delegates affirmed the policy that physicians should not be coerced
into doing anything which violated their moral principles. The Catholic
Health Organisation described this as a victory, while Dr Delmar Tonge,
chairman of the California delegation which had proposed the original
resolution, said that the AMA and Catholic hospitals would now work
together to help steer patients towards facilities which did offer
reproductive services. [Associated Press, 15 June; from Pro-Life E-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