News, 1 March 2001
Researchers in California have claimed that doctors are
misinterpreting markers on ultra-sound scans which have been taken to
indicate an increased chance of Down's syndrome. Dr Rebecca
Smith-Bindman at the University of California in San Francisco said
that only one of the seven markers often used by doctors to detect
Down's syndrome was found to have any significant reliability and,
even with this marker, only three percent of unborn babies were found
to have Down's syndrome after an amniocentesis test. Dr Smith-Bindman
said that between 10% and 14% of unborn children display at
least one of the markers, but fewer than one percent actually have the
syndrome. The researcher used her findings to claim that most
amniocentesis tests, which carry a small risk of
miscarriage, were "unnecessary". [
AP, via Fox News, 28 February]
Alison Davis, head of SPUC's handicap division, who herself has spina
bifida, commented: "The implication here seems to be that
amniocentesis would be worthwhile if it could reliably detect a child
with Down's syndrome. This constitutes a sinister form of potentially
fatal discrimination against unborn children with Down's syndrome,
whose lives are just as valuable as anyone else's."
The premier of British Columbia has sought to make abortion a
provincial election issue by strongly affirming his own anti-life
stance. Mr Ujjal Dosanjg of Canada's New Democratic Party made a
speech on Tuesday in which he described abortion rights as a
"fundamental issue" and declared: "I want to tell you that I will
fight to ensure that a woman's reproductive rights are safeguarded and
never taken away. I'm proud of my work to ensure that women throughout
BC will always have access to birth control--including the
morning-after pill--and access to safe abortions." Mr Dosanjg warned
that some candidates for the opposition Liberal party "want to take
away a woman's right to choose". [
LifeSite Daily News, 28 February]
Tommy Thompson, the US health and human services secretary, has said
that scientists should continue to submit applications for federal
funding of destructive embryonic stem cell research while the Bush
administration considers whether to block such funding. Mr Thompson
said that the final decision on whether to authorise the funding would
be made by President Bush. Mr Thompson has expressed his personal
support for embryonic stem cell research in the past, and told an
interviewer for Associated Press: "I'm very strongly involved with
research and research is important, but there are also legal and
ethical questions that have got to be resolved." [
AP, 28 February; via
Northern Light; etc.]
A judge in San Francisco, California, has awarded $672,610 in
damages to an immigrant from Yugoslavia whose unborn child lost two
limbs in a botched abortion carried out in a Planned Parenthood
clinic. The child's abortion was then completed a few months later at
another clinic. It emerged in the court hearing that the immigrant
was actually carrying twins, only one of whom was killed in the
initial abortion procedure while the other was dismembered. Planned
Parenthood did not tell the woman that she had twins but informed her
that the abortion had been completed. The woman is now said to be
suffering from severe post-abortion trauma. [ALL/STOPP media
release, 28 February]
A Methodist lobbying group in the United States is supporting an
attempt to overturn President Bush's ban on federal funding of
international pro-abortion groups. The United Methodist Board of
Church and Society has endorsed a bill before congress which would
repeal the president's executive order re-introducing the so-called
Mexico City policy. President Bush is a Methodist. Mark Tooley of the
Institute on Religion and Democracy said that the board's endorsement
did not represent official Methodist policy. [
Agape Press, 28
February]
A study commissioned by the Population Commission in the Philippines
has claimed that one in six pregnancies in the country are ended by
abortion, and that 25 out of every 1,000 women aged 15 to 44 obtain
induced abortions each year. Tomas Osias, executive director of the
commission, said that abortion constituted the fourth highest cause of
death among women. [
Manila Times, 1 March] Claims of high rates of
unsafe backstreet abortions are a common ploy by pro-abortionists who
seek the liberalisation of abortion laws. Their statistics almost
always prove to be erroneous.
A report prepared by the secretary-general of the United Nations has
revealed that $42 million of Mr Ted Turner's money was used for population control last year. Mr Turner, the American media
billionaire, donated $1 billion to the United Nations in 1998
to be administered through his own UN Foundation. [
LifeSite Daily
News, 28 February]
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