News, 25 April 2001
The head of a London fertility clinic and one of his patients have
failed in an attempt to bring a judicial review of the rule which
limits to three the number of embryos who can be implanted during
in
vitro fertilisation treatment [see digest for 23 April]. Mr Justice
Ouseley at the High Court in London dismissed the application because
he decided that there was no arguable case. Mr Mohammed Taranissi,
head of the clinic which submitted the application, said that he would
probably take the matter to the Court of Appeal because it was "a
matter of principle and, if nothing else, it will make people think
about the issue". [
BBC News online, 24 April]
A contributor to a British medical publication has claimed that the
study often cited to prove the safety of the abortifacient
morning-after pill was flawed. The writer of a letter published in
The
Lancet observed that the World Health Organisation's much cited trial
of the drug used a sample of only 100 women who took the regimen only
once. One of these women died of meningitis, while 21 "were lost to
follow-up". [
LifeSite, 23 April;
The Lancet, vol.357, no.9263, 14
April]
The government of China has introduced legislation to ban
sex-selective abortions. Zhang Weiqing, minister in charge of the
state family planning commission, told a standing committee of the
National People's Congress that abortions based on gender preferences
had "seriously impaired the gender balance of the population" and that
the draft law strictly prohibited the identification of an unborn baby
's sex when there was "no medical purpose". However, the draft law
upholds China's population control policy which limits couples to one
child, or two children if certain "legal conditions" are met. [
People's Daily, 24 April]
The government of Singapore is encouraging its population to have more
children. Initiatives include a government-sponsored Baby Bonus Scheme
which offers financial incentives to couples who have a second or
third child, the extension of maternity leave, the introduction of
paternity leave and media campaigns encouraging Singaporeans to have
more sex. The birth rate in Singapore has dropped to 1.5 children per
woman of childbearing age. [
Omaha World-Herald, 25 April] In 1996,
there were 14,400 abortions in Singapore. This constituted a rate of
15.9 per 1,000 women aged 15-44, or 22.8 abortions for every 100 known
pregnancies. [
Family Planning Perspectives, January 1999]
A comatose woman in Florida is to be dehydrated and starved to death.
The 2nd District Court of Appeal authorised the withdrawal of Terri
Schiavo's feeding tubes at the request of her husband and against the
wishes of her parents, who claimed that she recognised and reacted to
them. On Monday, Anthony Kennedy, the US Supreme Court justice who
hears emergency appeals from Florida, refused to intervene in the
case. Mrs Schiavo has been in a coma for more than 10 years after
suffering a heart attack. [AP, 24 April; via Pro-Life Infonet]
A malpractice trial in Milwaukee, USA, has heard how abortionists
accidentally poisoned and killed a woman while they were aborting her
unborn child. The lethal chemical, which was intended to kill Linda
Bloom's unborn child because he or she had Down's syndrome, got into
Mrs Bloom's bloodstream and caused fatal heart damage in 1995. The
doctor who administered the injection denies negligence. [
Milwaukee
Journal Sentinel, 24 April]
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