News, 23 November 2000
The Moldovan Orthodox Church has announced that it will excommunicate
any member of parliament who votes to legalise abortion. The national
parliament voted in favour of a draft law to legalise abortions earlier
this month, and a second vote in favour would be a further step towards
legalisation. In an open letter to parliamentarians, Metropolitan
Vladimir said: "We will demand from the clergy not to give communion to
those supporting abortions until they have changed their attitude to
this crime." [
EWTN News, 22 November]
A British government minister has confirmed that an order to reclassify the
Levonelle-2
morning-after pill as an over-the-counter drug, available from
pharmacists without a doctor's prescription, could be laid before
parliament shortly. Yvette Cooper, minister for public health, wrote in
a written House of Commons answer: "The application has now been
considered by the Medicines Commission. If we decide to proceed, an
Order will be laid shortly." [Hansard, 20 November]
Having given his personal support to research on human embryos,
including so-called therapeutic cloning, last week, the British prime
minister yesterday refused to say whether he and his wife would have
been prepared to donate their own spare embryos to research. When asked
at a press conference the hypothetical question of whether he and
Cherie Blair would have been happy to donate spare embryos generated as
a result of fertility treatment, Tony Blair replied: "For the first
time in all the press conferences I have done, I am completely stumped
for an answer." He then described it as a "very personal question".
Stephen Byers, trade and industry secretary, also refused to be drawn,
but Lord Sainsbury, science minister, had no such qualms and said that
he would have been willing to donate his embryos. [Daily Telegraph, 23
November]
Abortion has become an important issue in the Canadian general election
campaign, according to a national newspaper. The Campaign Life
Coalition has reported an unprecedented interest in the issue during
door to door canvassing, while the Canadian Abortion Rights Action
League has claimed that many people have contacted their offices to
express concern at the possible election of Stockwell Day's Alliance
party. Mr Day is personally opposed to abortion, whereas Jean Chrétien,
the incumbent Liberal party prime minister, holds a staunch
pro-abortion position. The election takes place next Monday. [
The Globe and Mail, 22 November]
The attorney general of the American state of Massachusetts has decided
to ask a judge to clarify his injunction against the enforcement of a
new abortion clinic buffer zone law [
see digest for 21 November],
and if necessary to appeal against the ruling. The law had sought to
restrict the activities of pro-life demonstrators and counsellors
outside abortion facilities, but Judge Edward F Harrington said that
the law was unfairly biased against the pro-lifers. Attorney General
Thomas F Reilly said that he would be prepared to accept an amendment
to the law in order to make it acceptable, and insisted that the law
was meant to improve safety rather than to deny freedom of speech. [
Boston Herald, 22 November]
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