News, 8 November 2000
Hillary Clinton, the pro-abortionist American first lady who said that
she would support the campaign to liberalise abortion laws in Brazil
if elected to the US Senate [see
digest for 1 September] won her race
in New York last night. In May, Mrs Clinton had commented: "I intend
to be a voice and a vote and an advocate for women's rights on behalf
of a woman's right to choose [an abortion]." [
BBC News online, 8
November;
CNN, 25 May]
Professor Lord Winston, the British fertility expert, has said that
women are often pressurised into having
in vitro fertilisation (IVF)
treatment when the simpler, cheaper and often more effective option of
surgery to unblock fallopian tubes could enable them to conceive
naturally. Addressing the Millennium Festival of Medicine in London,
Lord Winston said: "We have to look very carefully at the overall
picture. We should try to restore fertility first instead of
immediately using the blunderbuss which IVF still sadly is." He
observed that fertility clinics often lacked expertise in tubal
surgery, but that "surgery is cheaper than IVF, offers restoration of
fertility and does not carry the risk of a multiple birth." [
The
Independent, 8 November] Dominic Baster, information officer at the
Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, observed: "Lord Winston
omits to mention that surgery also avoids the high so-called wastage
rates of IVF, whereby many new and unique human beings are killed or
discarded in the process and thus denied any recognition of their
right to life as members of the human family."
The ProLife Alliance, whose last-ditch attempt to prevent the
separation of Siamese twins Jodie and Mary failed last week in the
English courts, yesterday expressed their regret at Mary's death and
their hope that Jodie would make a full recovery. They also criticised
the way in which St Mary's hospital in Manchester had handled the
situation. Their statement concluded: "We are absolutely shocked at
the hospital's cowardly and misleading statement that 'despite all the
efforts of the medical team Mary died'. There was never any possible
chance of survival for Mary once the operation began as the medical
team was perfectly aware ... The hospital should now have the courage
of its convictions and not try to hide behind euphemistic press
statements." [ProLife Alliance press statement, 7 November]
There are reports that pro-abortion campaigners in Ireland are
mobilising to resist calls for another referendum on the issue. Ms
Sinéad Kennedy, speaking for the pro-choice campaign, said that a
number of pro-abortion groups would be joining forces to lobby members
of parliament, march and publicise their calls for legislation instead
of a referendum. She said that such legislation should, at the very
least, put the 1992 Supreme Court ruling that abortion could be
performed in cases of a serious threat to the life of the mother,
including suicide, on a statutory footing. [
The Irish Times, 6
November]
Researchers at the University of North Carolina in the US have
suggested that mothers who take additional calcium before and during
pregnancy may prevent their unborn children from being exposed to
unhealthy levels of lead. Exposure to lead has been linked to
impairment of growth, hearing and intelligence, as well as behavioural
problems. The researchers concluded that unborn babies sapped their
mother's bone tissue to gain calcium if there were insufficient
amounts of calcium in the mother's diet, but bone tissue also contains
lead which the unborn babies take in as well. [
Nando Media, 6
November]
The inventor of the RU-486 abortion pill has described as "immoral"
the Australian government's support for legislation which, since 1996,
has placed such tight restrictions on the drug's importation that it
has been virtually banned. Professor Etienne-Emile Baulieu said:
"Australia has such an image of progress and freedom, and care for
health problems. But this is really terrible." Jenny Macklin, the
Australian opposition's health spokesman, said that she personally
supported the introduction of RU-486. [
The Age, 5 November]
Meanwhile, it has been reported that misoprostol, the prostaglandin
drug which is often used in tandem with RU-486 to induce abortions, is
being used on its own to induce abortions in Australia against the
guidelines of Searle, the drug's manufacturer. One private clinic in
Melbourne was said to be routinely supplying women with misoprostol to
induce abortions between 12 and 18 weeks into pregnancy, despite
warnings from Searle that to use the drug in this way posed a variety
of serious health dangers to the women. [
The Age, 5 November]
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