News, 1 May 2001
It has been confirmed that SPUC's judicial review hearing will take
place at 10.30 a.m. tomorrow at the Royal Courts of Justice on The
Strand in central London. SPUC will be seeking permission to bring a
judicial review of the British government's decision to reclassify the
abortifacient Levonelle-2 morning-after pill as a drug available from
pharmacists without a doctor's prescription. Mr John Smeaton, national
director of SPUC, said: "The government's statutory instrument is an
attempt to circumvent the Abortion Act 1967, which provides such
limited supervision of abortion as there is. It ushers in an entirely
unsupervised abortion by pill procedure ... By it's action, SPUC is
seeking to protect women and young girls from harm, and pharmacists
from criminal liability when the dangers which are so obvious begin to
result in actual harm to those who have obtained the drug from
chemists' shops." [
SPUC media release, 1 May]
The British government has announced that all pregnant women will be
offered non-invasive tests for Down's syndrome in their unborn babies
by 2004. Yvette Cooper, the pro-abortion minister for public health,
also said that testing would be available for HIV, hepatitis, rubella
and syphilis. [
BBC News online, 30 April] An SPUC spokesman commented:
"Experience indicates that women who receive positive test results for
these conditions are put under great pressure to have abortions. The
fact that the pre-natal identification of babies with Down's syndrome
or other anomalies has become a priority of public health is truly
sickening because it entails a fatal form of discrimination against
those human individuals whom society deems to be unworthy of life."
An influential committee of the Church of Scotland has endorsed both
reproductive and so-called therapeutic human cloning. The Presbyterian
denomination's board of social responsibility concluded that cloned
humans would be made in the image of God and possess souls like anyone
else, and should therefore be accorded full equality with other
humans. However, reports suggest that the committee also endorsed the
cloning of embryos for so-called therapeutic purposes [a process which
entails the creation and destruction of new human life]. It is
reported that the committee's conclusions are almost certain to be
accepted by the Church of Scotland's general assembly next month.
[
Scotland on Sunday, 29 April]
The incoming president of the American College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists (ACOG) has said that women should be allowed to keep
stocks of the abortifacient morning-after pill at home. Dr Thomas
Purdon told the ACOG's annual meeting that women of childbearing age
should be offered advance prescriptions for [erroneously so-called]
emergency contraceptives because it was "abysmal" that half of all
pregnancies in the US were unintended. Dr Purdon looked forward "to
the time when we may find emergency contraception to be as common in
most women's homes as a first-aid kit." [
Washington Post and
Reuters,
30 April]
Authorities in New Zealand are considering whether to allow human
embryos who have been left over from in vitro fertilisation treatment
to be donated to childless couples. The National Ethics Committee on
Assisted Human Reproduction has been asked to offer guidance on how to
regulate the donation of frozen embryos, a practice which already
happens in Australia, Britain and the USA. [
The New Zealand Herald, 30
April]
A judge in Florida has stopped the dehydration and starvation of Terri
Schiavo [see
news digest for 25 April] amid claims that her husband
may have lied in court. Mrs Schiavo has been in a comatose state for
10 years after suffering a heart attack, and last week the US Supreme
Court refused to review an appeal court ruling that her feeding tubes
be removed. However, Michael Schiavo's ex-girlfriend has now claimed
that he was lying when he told the court that his wife had requested
not to be put on life support. [
LifeSite, 27 April]
The governor of Iowa has vetoed a bill which would have required women
to receive information on abortion and its alternatives at least 24
hours before they underwent the procedure. The Woman's Right to Know
Act had been approved by majorities of more than two to one in both
chambers of Iowa's legislature, but Governor Tom Vilsack rejected the
measure because he thought it was not the role of the government to
influence women's decisions on whether to have abortions. [
The Des
Moines Register, 27 April]
Researchers in the United States have suggested that pregnant women
who take the ecstasy drug can damage the long-term learning and memory
abilities of their unborn child. The findings, published in the
Journal of Neuroscience, indicate that ecstasy can pose a previously
unrecognised risk to the developing brains of unborn children in the
third trimester of pregnancy. [
AP, via AccessWaco.com, 1 May]
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, 2012