News, 16 February 2001
Members of the European parliament are being asked to add their
signatures to a draft resolution condemning moves to legalise
euthanasia in certain European countries. Maria Martens, a Dutch
member of the parliament who belongs to the European People's Party,
is collecting the signatures and hopes to present the resolution for
debate and a vote next month. The resolution condemns active
euthanasia and calls on member states to develop adequate care and
pain therapy for the terminally ill. [
Zenit news agency, 15 February]
The agency which regulates fertility treatment in the UK has expressed
concern at the lack of stricter regulation in some American states.
The Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority said that it was
aware of the growing number of British couples who travelled to the US
to buy eggs from donors. A BBC investigation revealed that British
couples could buy human eggs from the US over the internet, and that
the number of couples willing to pay up to 20,000 dollars to undergo
in vitro fertilisation (IVF) treatment in the US had tripled over the
past two years. In the UK, the practice of buying human eggs is
banned. [
BBC News online, 16 February] Most human beings conceived
through IVF die before implantation, and most of those who are
introduced into a woman die before birth.
A federal court in Puerto Rico has awarded thousands of dollars in
compensation to two women who encountered pro-life demonstrators when
they went to obtain abortions in 1992 and 1993. The women were awarded
$26,125 each, while the two abortion facilities were awarded
$197,227 for loss of business. A further $100,000 was
awarded in punitive damages. Judge Jose Antonio Fuste said: "A woman
who is unable to keep her appointment for an abortion because of a
blockade suffers tremendous physical and emotional harm." Pro Vida,
the pro-life group involved in the demonstrations, plans to appeal.
[
AP, 15 February; via Northern Light]
Pro-abortion legislators yesterday introduced a measure to the US Congress
aimed at reversing President Bush's re-introduction of the
Mexico City policy which prevents US aid from being given to any
international group which either provides or promotes abortion. The
legislation, introduced in both the Senate and House of
Representatives, states that no organisation shall be ineligible for
aid "solely on the basis of health or medical services". Senator
Barbara Boxer, an author of the measure, criticised President Bush's
decision to block US funding of pro-abortion groups and said: "It is
cruel to women. It is backward. It is counterproductive. It will lead
to more women dying." The chances of the legislation's being passed by
Congress are thought to be very slim. [
San Francisco Chronicle, 15
February]
The Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (CCCB) has signalled its
support for the decision by the Canadian Catholic Organization for
Development and Peace to disassociate from the pro-abortion World
March of Women [see
news digest for 13 February]. The CCCB supported
the World March of Women last year, although a number of bishops
voiced their personal opposition. Bishop Nicola De Angelis, an
auxiliary bishop in the archdiocese of Toronto, had stressed at the
time that the CCCB was a purely administrative body and could not
speak for the Canadian episcopate as a whole. [
LifeSite, 15 February]
Pro-life campaigners in central London have embarked on a major
information campaign to highlight the true nature and dangers of the
abortifacient morning-after pill. William Jolliffe, secretary of the
Kensington and Chelsea branch of SPUC, has arranged for information
leaflets to be sent to 64,000 homes in the parliamentary constituency.
[SPUC media release, 16 February]
The Christian Medical Association in the United States has accused
those groups which have requested over-the-counter sales of the
abortifacient morning-after pill of neglecting the medical ethic of
informed consent. Dr David Stevens, executive director of the
14,000-member association, was reacting to the news that 60 groups had
petitioned the US Food and Drug Administration to reclassify the drug
[see
news digest for 14 February]. He said: "These activists are
saying a woman is not pregnant because implantation has not taken
place... [they] are pulling the wool over women's eyes by obscuring
the fact that the morning-after pill causes a living human being to
die..." [
PR Newswire, 15 February; via Northern Light]
The three main maternity hospitals in Dublin recorded a considerable
rise in the number of births last year. The total was up by 500, and
the Coombe Women's Hospital reported its busiest year in two decades.
[
Irish Independent, 16 February] The right to life of the unborn is
constitutionally protected in the Irish Republic.
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