News, 1 June 2001
The total number of unborn children killed by abortion in Scotland
fell last year. Official figures released yesterday indicated that
there were 11,966 abortions recorded in 2000, compared to 12,167 in
1999. However, the number of girls under 16 who had abortions rose by
almost 10% to 274 from 251 in 1999. Almost 3,000 abortions were
carried out last year on girls under 19. The Scottish executive
welcomed the small overall decline in abortions, but Fr Danny
McLoughlin, a spokesman for the Catholic Church in Scotland, said:
"Behind every one of these figures is a personal tragedy." Ian Murray,
director of SPUC Scotland, pointed out that the figures proved that
initiatives intended to reduce teenage pregnancy rates by "throwing
condoms and pills" at young people were not working. [
Daily Record and
Scottish Daily Mail, 1 June]
Belgium is to make the abortifacient morning-after pill available from
pharmacists without a doctor's prescription. Magda Alvoet, the Belgian
health minister, announced that the Norlevo morning-after-pill would
become available from pharmacists on 10 June as an "emergency solution" to the growing number of Belgian women under 20 who were
having abortions. [
Reuters, via ABC News, 31 May]
Researchers in the United States believe that human muscle tissue
could be injected into the heart to replace dead cells. A team led by
Dr Robb MacLellan at the University of California in Los Angeles
injected cells from a heart-attack patient's biceps into the back of
his heart last month, in addition to performing a quadruple bypass.
The man is now feeling well. Dr MacLellan believes that skeletal
muscle cells taken from the arm or leg may function in the same way as
heart cells, which do not regenerate of their own accord. This
technique could provide an ethical alternative to the use of human
embryonic stem cells and so-called therapeutic cloning for the treatment of heart disease. [
National Post online, 31 May]
Britain's Medical Research Council has made a grant of two million
pounds to facilitate nationwide testing of a computer system which
monitors the health of unborn babies during labour. The foetal
monitoring project, which analyses an unborn baby's heart beat and
compares it to the heart beats of thousands of other babies, has
already been tested successfully in Plymouth, south west England. It
is hoped that the technology will prevent babies from dying or being
brain damaged during labour as a result of human error. [
BBC News
online, 31 May]
Pope John Paul II has criticised genetic manipulation of human beings
and experimentation on human embryos. Marking the 20th anniversary of
the John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and the Family in
Rome, the Pope warned against those who "arrogate to themselves an
arbitrary and limitless power over the human being". He affirmed that
"from the mysterious instant of his conception ... [a human being]
must be accepted and treated as a person, created in the image and
likeness of God himself". [
Zenit, 31 May]
An alliance of Evangelical protestant groups in Canada has endorsed
civil disobedience as a justifiable Christian response to abortion.
The Evangelical Fellowship of Canada released a discussion paper
earlier this week which states that public, non-violent acts contrary
to the law, such as the picketing of abortion clinics, may constitute
"a part of giving unqualified primary allegiance to God". [
LifeSite,
31 May]
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