News, 14 September 2000
In what is seen as an unprecedented move, the Roman Catholic archbishop
of Westminster and a pro-life group have been asked by the English
Court of Appeal to make written submissions in the case of the Siamese
twins Jodie and Mary. The twins' parents, who are opposing an
application to separate their daughters, are themselves said to be
devout Catholics. Archbishop Cormac Murphy-O'Connor, seen as leader of
Roman Catholics in England and Wales, has said that "a very dangerous
precedent" would be set if the judges ruled that a person could be
killed "so that good may come of it". The archbishop's spokesman said
that he would be offering reflections based on Catholic moral teaching
"which may be of assistance to the judges in deciding on this tragic
and heart-rending case". The Pro-Life Alliance will make its submission
with regard to the implications of the European Convention on Human
Rights [certain aspects of which are given particular status in English
law under the Human Rights Act which comes into force on 2 October],
although Tim Owen QC, appearing for Jodie, said that the Human Rights
Act would not prevent doctors from operating with the sole intention of
saving Jodie's life [even if such an act inevitably led to the death of
Mary]. Yesterday the court was told that Mary, the weaker twin, appears
to be growing normally, possibly at the expense of her sister Jodie who
is feeding but not developing as doctors had expected. [BBC News
Online, 13 & 14 September;
Daily Telegraph &
The Times, 14 September]
A French nurse who has admitted helping terminally ill patients to die
at a lung hospital near Paris between 1997 and 1998 was committed to
trial yesterday on seven counts of murder. Christine Malevre, aged 30,
last year sparked a public debate on euthanasia in France by publishing
a book on the subject. She was initially charged with 11 deaths and had
originally told police that she helped up to 30 patients end their
lives. [Reuters, 13 September; from Pro-Life Infonet]
Anti-abortion activists in the United States are appealing against the
verdict of a jury, given in February 1999, that they are liable to pay
109 million dollars for a campaign against abortionists conducted by
way of posters and a website. Entitled
The Nuremberg Files,
the website listed the names of hundreds of abortionists for use in
later trials for crimes against humanity. It was decided in the
original case that this action had gone beyond free speech (enshrined
in the US Constitution's First Amendment) because it was likely to
cause "imminent lawless action". Other legal experts have said that
freedom of speech is not exceeded unless an explicit threat is
contained. Oral arguments before a panel of the 9th US Circuit Court of
Appeals began this week. [CNN.com, 12 September; EWTN News, 13
September]
The archbishop of Santo Domingo in the Dominican Republic has used
his weekly television programme to affirm that science must be used to
further a culture of life rather than promote a culture of death.
Cardinal Nicolás de Jesús López Rodríguez said, "We must rejoice that
the Creator has given to humanity this capacity of investigation," but
warned that science and technology had been wrongly linked to a culture
of death which does not respect the integrity of the human being. He
observed: "We are before two totally different thoughts: the culture of
life and the culture of death." [EWTN News, 13 September]
A national opinion poll in the United States has indicated that
the public is very much divided as to whether the RU-486 abortion pill
should be marketed. The ABC News poll, conducted by ICR on a random
sample of 1,006 adults, indicated that 45 percent believe the drug
should be legal, as compared to 47 percent who think it should remain
illegal. The same poll indicated that when asked simply about abortion,
55 percent of Americans believe that it should be legal in all or most
cases and 42 percent think that it should not. [ABC News, 13 September]
A pro-life educational charity in the United Kingdom is launching
an essay competition for 15 to 18-year-olds in memory of Robin McNair,
a Second World War fighter pilot and later anti-abortion campaigner.
The competition, jointly sponsored by the SPUC Educational Research
Trust and the late Squadron Leader McNair's family, aims to engage
young people in the issues surrounding abortion. [SPUC Educational
Research Trust
media release, 14 September]
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