News, 21 September 2000
Research carried out in England has suggested that what a mother eats
between the time of her unborn child's conception and his or her
implantation in the womb may have a long-term impact on the child's
health. Professor Tom Fleming from Southampton University, whose
findings have been published in New Scientist magazine, found that the
offspring of female rats who had been starved of protein for just a
few days after mating were more prone to abnormalities and developed
less quickly in the womb. This might also apply to humans.
Implantation in the case of human unborn babies usually occurs between
five and six days after conception. [
BBC News online, 21 September]
Pro-life groups have criticised the annual report on 'The State of
World Population' published by the pro-abortion United Nations
Population Fund (UNFPA). The report focuses on "gender inequality" and
is reported to include lack of access to 'control over reproductive
activity' among examples of such inequality. The report also claims
that a third of pregnancies worldwide are unwanted or 'mistimed', and
that 20 million out of 50 million abortions carried out each year are
unsafe. Mark DeYoung, of the World Life League, said: "For the UNFPA,
gender equality can be achieved only through a reduction in fertility.
Yet, it is ultimately so-called family planning programmes that widen
the gap of gender inequality and create the occasion for countless
human rights abuses." [Catholic News Service & A.P., from Yahoo! News,
20 September]
Staff at a home for the mentally disabled in Japan have been accused
of forcing a woman in her early 20s to have an abortion in 1991. The
woman, who visited the home daily, was allegedly given drugs to induce
labour six months into her pregnancy, with the result that she gave
birth to a baby boy who later died. Human rights officials claim that
the director of the home told doctors to administer the drugs despite
their reluctance to do so. This would have breached the Eugenic
Protection Law, renamed the Maternity Protection Law in 1996, which
bans abortions after the 22nd week of pregnancy. [Mainichi Daily News,
19 September]
The US senate has voted in favour of approving permanent normal trade
relations with China. The measure passed by 83 votes to 15 on Tuesday
(19 September). Earlier, on 13 September, senators had rejected by 53
votes to 43 an amendment urging the president to call on China to end
forced abortions and sterilisations. [LifeSite Daily News, 20
September; Washington Post, 14 September]
A former Nicaraguan minister of family affairs has spoken about
"secretive, manipulative" international pressure on his country to
abandon pro-life policies. Max Padilla said: "Anti-life forces are
moving and pulling strings in the same secretive, manipulative way as
they do in the international arena. I hope we can raise public
awareness before we suffer the consequences." National Catholic
Register, an American publication, claimed that the United Nations
Population Fund withheld 11 million US dollars in aid to Nicaragua
because the country refused to accept definitions of gender and
reproductive health rights which are taken by various international
organisations to entail access to abortion. The report asserted that
threats by donor countries to make aid contingent upon changes in the
pro-life policy of the government following the devastation caused by
Hurricane Mitch led earlier this year to the forced resignation of Mr
Padilla, after he created a commission, composed mainly of pro-life
experts, to draw up Nicaraguan definitions of gender and health
rights. When a letter signed by various European diplomatic
representatives expressed alarm at this move, despite the fact that no
UN conference had agreed upon any such definitions, Mr Padilla was
replaced by the president's wife. [Zenit news agency, 19 September]
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