News, 2 March 2000
Anti-euthanasia legislation has successfully completed the second stage
of its scrutiny by the UK Parliament. The committee examining the
Medical Treatment (Prevention of Euthanasia) Bill yesterday voted that
it should proceed to its report stage, which will take place on 14
April. The Society for the Protection of Unborn Children (SPUC) will be
lobbying Parliament during the preceding week.
The Scottish executive (government) has amended the Adults with
Incapacity (Scotland) Bill so that doctors will be the principal
decision-makers on whether patients' treatment and sustenance can be
withdrawn. Doctors will have to consult those representing patients
but, if such representatives disagree with a doctor's decision, the
representatives would have to go to court. Christian leaders continue
to oppose the Bill, which they say needs a clause guaranteeing food and
fluid for patients. [The Herald and the Daily Mail, 1 March, 2000]
Marie Stopes International claims that the number of abortions they
performed in Britain rose by 20% in the first two months of this year
because of millennial celebrations and restricted availability of the
morning-after pill. [Daily Telegraph, 2 March, 2000]
The British government has appointed 150 coordinators to halve the
number of teenage pregnancies by 2010. At 90,000 per year, the UK's
teenage pregnancy rate is the highest in Europe, with 8,000 of the
girls under 16. The coordinators are former health-visitors, nurses and
health-advisers. The advice they give will include information on
abortion. [The Independent and the Daily Mail, 1 March, 2000]
During this month and next month, the US House of Representatives and
Senate will consider granting permanent normal trade relations status
to China, though pro-life groups oppose it because of China's forced
abortion policy.
The Ontario health ministry has had to be forced to reveal the number
of abortions performed in the province. The government protested
unsuccessfully to the information and privacy commission that
publishing such statistics would prompt riots. There were some 44,000
recorded abortions in Ontario in 1998, more than in each of the four
preceding years. [Pro-Life E-News, 29 February 2000]
There is controversy in Australia after TV-viewers were told that women
who had pregnancy-terminations would be confronted in the afterlife by
their aborted offspring. Preacher Gilbert Lumoindong told people
watching a Living Stone Foundation programme on the Seven Network that
abortion was a sin even if the pregnancy was the result of rape.
[Sydney Morning Herald reported in Pro-Life E-News, 29 February, 2000]
The Texas supreme court has denied an abortion to an unmarried
17-year-old girl because she did not tell either or both of her parents
of her intention. Governor George W Bush signed the relevant law which
the state-legislature passed last year. The girl's case has been
returned to the trial-court. [Pro-Life Infonet, 28 February 2000]
A British hospital consultant has admitted to prescribing double doses
of morphine and a sedative to a patient dying from cancer in 1996. Dr
Jonathan Henry Brooks' motive is said to have been to relieve pain.
[The Guardian, 29 February, 2000]
The second edition of the Pro-Life Times, SPUC's newspaper, will be
published on Sunday. Readers in the United Kingdom who would like a
copy should email their name and postal address to plt@spuc.org.uk
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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