News, 13 September 2000
New figures released by the office for national statistics in England
and Wales have indicated that the number of girls becoming pregnant
before their sixteenth birthday [the legal age of consent in the UK]
rose significantly in the second quarter of 1999 to 8·6 per 1,000. The
figure had peaked at 9·1 per 1,000 in early 1998 but had then started
to fall. Just over half of all pregnancies in this age group end in
abortion. [
Daily Mail, 13 September]
The case of Siamese twins Jodie and Mary will resume today in the
English Court of Appeal. The BBC reports that the hearing could last
several more days, after which judgement may still be reserved to a
later date. [BBC News Online, 12 September]
A scientific study has concluded that a technique sometimes used as part of
in vitro
fertilisation treatment increases the risks of congenital anomalies.
The study, carried out by the US Center of Disease Control and
Prevention, found that the technique of 'assisted hatching', whereby
the membrane surrounding embryos produced in a test-tube is pierced or
thinned so as to facilitate their implantation in the womb, is more
likely to lead to monozygotic twinning where a single embryo splits
into two at an early stage. This can lead to congenital anomalies more
often than is the case with the usual form of twinning. Only two
centres in the UK are licensed to offer assisted hatching. It is
usually offered to women after attempts at embryo transfer [from the
test-tube into the wall of the womb] have repeatedly failed. [BBC News
Online, 12 September]
The US House of Representatives is expected to vote on the
Born-Alive Infants Protection Act within the next two weeks. The
legislation stipulates that any human baby must be considered "born
alive" [and therefore entitled to full legal recognition and
protection] if he or she "breathes or has a beating heart, pulsation of
the umbilical cord, or definite movement of voluntary muscles,
regardless of whether the umbilical cord has been cut, and regardless
of whether the expulsion or extraction occurs as a result of natural or
induced labor, cesarean section, or induced abortion". Richard Lessner,
vice-president of American Renewal, attacked a statement issued by the
pro-abortion lobby which, he said, strongly suggested "that it should
be left to the abortionist to decide whether the life of a fully born
baby is worth saving". [EWTN News, 12 September]
The Catholic bishops of Argentina have included the "crime of
abortion" among the sins for which they have asked forgiveness on
behalf of Catholics in the country. The bishops' statement referred to
a number of failings, particularly during the military dictatorship of
1976 to 1983, and confessed that "many Christians, in the name of human
rights, may have invited the crime of abortion, euthanasia and
cruelty..." [EWTN News, 12 September]
It is now expected that the US Food and Drug Administration will
release its decision regarding the RU-486 abortion pill, otherwise
known as mifepristone, before the end of this month. It may either
approve the drug for sale, reject it, or request further information. A
spokesperson for Danco Laboratories LLC, the company which hopes to
market RU-486 in the US, said that the drug could be on sale weeks
after authorisation was given. The company has developed a marketing
strategy for the drug and decided upon Early Option as a tentative
brand-name. Manufacture of the drug has been contracted out to a
Chinese company until approval for it to be produced in the US is
given. [
Omaha World Herald, 8 September; LifeSite Daily News, 5 September]
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