News, 26 April 2001
United States President George W Bush has given his full backing to
the Unborn Victims of Violence Act, which was taken up in the US House
of Representatives yesterday and will be voted on today. The text of a
White House statement affirms that the President "supports protection
for unborn children and therefore supports House passage of [this
bill]". The measure, which would make the causing of death or injury
to an unborn child a separate federal crime when inflicted in the
course of certain other crimes, has also received the support of the
National Right to Life Committee and the National Conference of
Catholic Bishops. However, Judie Brown, president of the American Life
League, argued against the bill. [Pro-Life Infonet and EWTN News, 25
April]
The government of Pakistan has accepted further grants from the
pro-abortion United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) to limit its
population growth. At a meeting with government representatives last
Tuesday, the UNFPA pledged another US$18 million for projects
aimed at reducing the growth rate from the current rate of 2.2%
to 1.9% by 2003. The projects will include the provision of
"quality reproductive health service[s]". [
LifeSite, 25 April]
According to a United Nations definition, reproductive healthcare
entails access to abortion and abortifacient methods of birth control.
The Indian Medical Association (IMA) has condemned sex-selective
abortions. Dr Vinay Agarwal, joint secretary of the IMA, described
prenatal sex determination and the selective abortion of baby girls as
"heinous crimes" and said that no support would be extended to any IMA
member who was caught performing such acts. Dr Ketan Desai, IMA
national president, called for an awareness programme to prevent the
practice, and all Indian doctors were asked to refrain from conducting
sex-determination tests. [
The Hindu Times, 24 April; via Pro-Life
E-News]
The UK's Liberal Democrats, Britain's third largest political party in
parliament, have pledged to ban age discrimination in the national
health service in their so-called mini-manifesto for health. [
BBC News
online, 26 April] Claims that hospital patients have been denied
resuscitation on the grounds of their age have led to charges of
creeping euthanasia.
President Bush has said that the American people would have
to come to an understanding of "the preciousness of human life" before
a ban on abortion could be thought of as realistic. In an interview to
mark his first three months in the White House, the president also
reiterated his support for a federal ban on partial birth abortions
but insisted that no pro-life litmus test would be used for appointing
supreme court justices. [
AP, via ABC28, 26 April]
Christian and Jewish pro-lifers have held a joint conference in New
York to explore how they can work together to promote the sanctity of
human life. The conference was co-sponsored by the Ave Maria School of
Law, a Catholic institution established by Thomas S Monaghan. [
CNS, 25
April]
Pro-life legislators in Tennessee hope to amend the state's
constitution to contain a direct contradiction of the US Supreme Court's judgement in
Roe v Wade. The state senate's judiciary committee
voted on Wednesday by five to four in favour of an amendment which states:
"There is no fundamental right to abortion in this state." In order
for the wording to be incorporated into the constitution, it would
have to be passed by both the House and the Senate twice in separate
years, and then receive the support of the population in a referendum.
[
The Tennessean, 25 April]
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