News, 1 September 2000
The Scottish Executive [which exercises powers recently devolved to
Scotland from London] has said that it will consider calls to allow
school nurses to hand out the [abortifacient] morning-after pill
without a doctor's prescription to girls as young as 12. Parental
consent would not be required. A spokesman for the Scottish Executive
said: "This proposal is in line with our aim of reducing unwanted
teenage pregnancies." The suggestion was put forward by Dr Anna
Glasier, clinical director of family planning at the Lothian primary
care National Health Service trust, one of the largest NHS trusts in
Scotland. This was the same trust which last year pioneered a new
scheme whereby women were given advance supplies of the morning-after
pill to keep at home. A change in the law would be necessary to allow
school nurses to prescribe the morning-after pill, and the idea has
met with opposition from a number of quarters. Mrs Mary Scanlon, the
Scottish Conservative party's health and social work spokeswoman, said
that she had "deep reservations about this proposal". Fr Danny
McLoughlin, spokesman for the Catholic Church in Scotland, expressed
concern that the move would mean young people thinking that they can
have sex without any consequences. "This is not the case, and it is
unfair to young people to let them believe so," he said. [The Herald &
Scottish Daily Mail, 28 August]
The legislature in the Mexican state of Morelos has passed a new law
which extends the grounds for legal abortions. Despite vocal protests
from pro-life campaigners, the legislature voted to decriminalise
abortion in a number of cases including rape, birth defects, a threat
to the mother's life, unauthorised artificial insemination and when
the mother has had an accident. The new legislation goes further than
the new law passed recently in Mexico City and comes at a time when
the topic of abortion law has become a subject of nationwide political
debate. [Washington Post, 31 August]
Hillary Clinton has offered to support the campaign to liberalise
abortion laws in Brazil if she is elected to the US senate. Abortion
is illegal in Brazil in most cases but, in an interview with the Folha
de Sao Paulo newspaper, the American first lady said: "I can help
Brazil to find its way to legalise abortion." [EWTN News, 30 August]
A Canadian professor who has spent more than 15 years studying the
experience of pain in babies born prematurely has added his voice to
recent concerns about the pain suffered by unborn babies during
abortions. Professor Ken Craig, a researcher and professor in
psychology at the University of British Columbia, said: "My experience
is they do experience pain. I say we should give the babies the
benefit of the doubt. At 24-25 weeks post-conception, a foetus
displays all of the physiological and behavioural reactions you
observe in children and adults." [Vancouver Province, 30 August; from
Pro-Life E-News]
The former president of the National Abortion and Reproductive Rights
Action League (NARAL) has been appointed US ambassador to Norway.
Robin Chandler Duke was given NARAL's lifetime achievement award in
1997 and has promoted financial and political support for the
pro-abortion United Nations Population Fund. He also recently donated
1,000 dollars to Al Gore's presidential campaign. [NRL, 29 August;
from Pro-Life Infonet, 31 August]
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