News, 30 July 2001
Certain United Nations committees have been accused of implementing an
anti-life, anti-family agenda, regardless of the provisions of UN
treaties. Mrs Amina Mesdoua told the World Family Policy Forum's
meeting in Utah that the Committee on the Rights of the Child had
promoted a new interpretation of the convention on children's rights.
The committee had wrongly suggested that the convention placed no
limits on the age at which children had access to so-called
reproductive services. [
C-FAM on EWTN, 27 July]
SPUC's Peter Smith, who does pro-life lobbying at the UN, said: "While
the pro-life groups work hard to delete or neutralise the worst parts
of the treaties, these compliance committees seem to be acting as
though the anti-life wording had been approved."
The UN's Human Rights Committee has expressed concern at the Dutch
law to legalise euthanasia which comes into effect at the beginning of
next year. The committee is alert for instances where states give legal
protection to "acts that put an end to life. The Vatican pointed out
that there was pressure on other states to imitate the Netherlands. [
Zenit, 29 July]
The French health minister has admitted that he practised euthanasia
when working as a physician in Lebanon and Vietnam. Dr Bernard Kouchner
described euthanasia as contrary to medical ethics but has called for a
public debate on the matter. [
EWTN, 26 July]
The US Senate's Appropriations Committee has amended a bill such that
public funds could go to overseas groups which advocate or perform
abortions. The decision could result in conflict between the
Democratic-led senate and the Republican-led House of Representatives,
as well as President Bush. [
EWTN, 27 July]
A daughter has been born to a woman in Ohio who sustained serious
injuries in a car crash two weeks after the child's conception and has
been in a coma ever since. Mrs Chastity Cooper gave birth
conventionally to Alexis Michelle who weighed eight pounds and is
healthy. [
BBC, 28 July]
Austrian scientists say they have found a gene which increases the risk
of miscarriage. Researchers at Vienna university say that women with a
particular variant of the NOS gene are three-fifths more likely to
miscarry three times or more. [
The Times, 27 July]
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