News, 28 December 2001
It is reported that the Irish abortion referendum will probably
take place on 28 February. Today's
Irish Times cites
"reliable sources" which indicate that Mr Bertie Ahern, the taoiseach,
is determined to go ahead with the referendum before the general
election and has already nominated 28 February as his preferred date.
A formal decision on the timing of the referendum is expected to be
made by the Irish cabinet on the 15th of next month. Fine Gael, the main
opposition party, is expected to campaign against the proposed
constitutional amendment. [
Irish Times, 28 December] The Adelaide Hospital Society (AHS), a protestant medical charity
in the Republic of Ireland, has recommended the authorisation of
destructive research on embryos and pre-implantation genetic
diagnosis. In its submission to the Commission on Assisted
Reproduction, the AHS also rejected use of the term "unborn" as having
no scientific meaning and described the "development of the human
person as a process". The Commission on Assisted Reproduction was set
up in the Irish Republic almost two years ago to consider the status
of pre-implantation embryos. [
Irish Times, 28 December] SPUC and other pro-life groups worldwide have warned that the proposed
Irish constitutional amendment would have the effect of removing legal
protection of pre-implantation embryos and of sanctioning destructive
experimentation and early abortion.
Five couples have applied to select designer babies to serve as tissue
donors for terminally ill siblings in the Australian state of
Victoria. Three couples from Victoria, one from Tasmania and one from
New Zealand have applied to Victoria's Infertility Treatment Authority
for permission to conceive babies using
in vitro fertilisation and
then to use pre-implantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) to select only
those healthy babies whose tissue provides a perfect match for their
older sibling. Margaret Tighe, chairman of Right to Life Australia,
condemned the plan as unacceptable "selective breeding" and pointed
out that the selected embryos would be unable to give their consent to
being used as tissue donors. The UK's Human Fertilisation and
Embryology Authority gave permission for PGD to be used for this
purpose earlier this month. [
The Canberra Times, 27 December]
A spokesperson for the Catholic Church in the Philippines has
dismissed claims that one woman in four has had a secret abortion as
"impossible". The Population Commission, an agency of the Philippines
government, made the claim earlier this month [see
news digest for 14
December], but Manny Arejola, a spokesman for the Church's commission
on family and life, accused the agency of inventing the figures to
"panic" Filipinos into agreeing to the legalisation of abortion. He
said that the International Planned Parenthood Federation, the United
Nations and others had been promoting abortion as a "back-up method of
contraception" and that the Philippines government had been a "willing
collaborator" in this. Mr Arejola continued: "They hide behind the
terms reproductive rights or reproductive health. But everyone knows
... when they use these terms, they mean abortion. It's a small group
but it speaks very loudly. Most people don't know enough to question
it." [
CNSNews, 26 December]
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, 2013