News, 3 May 2001
Pro-life groups in the UK have warmly welcomed SPUC's victory in the
High Court yesterday. Bruno Quintavalle, a spokesman for the ProLife
Alliance, congratulated SPUC on its success and observed that it was
astounding that the Department of Health had not bothered either to
address the matter or to be represented in court. Student LifeNet
issued a statement to say that it was "delighted" to hear of the
result, and noted that the description of the morning-after pill as a
contraceptive deceived women by "obscuring the devastating effects both
to their unborn child and to their own health". On the other hand, Ann
Weyman, chief executive of the Family Planning Association, called the
result "disappointing and extraordinary" while Ann Furedi of the
British Pregnancy Advisory Service, the UK's largest private abortion
provider, condemned the decision and called it "bizarre". The
Department of Health said that the British government would strongly
contest the action. [
Times,
Daily Telegraph and
Metro, 3 May;
BBC News online,
CNSNews and
London Evening Standard, 2 May]
The international relations committee of the US House of
Representatives yesterday adopted a measure which would have the effect
of overturning President Bush's Mexico City policy. This policy blocks
US federal funding of any group which either promotes or provides
abortions abroad. The committee voted by 26 to 22 in favour of the
measure, which took the form of an amendment to the state department's
spending bill. A White House spokesman indicated that the
administration would seek to remove the amendment when the bill was
discussed on the floor of the House. [
Washington Post, 3 May]
A feminist lobby group in Australia has been granted permission to
fight the Australian Catholic bishops' conference in court over the
provision of in vitro fertilisation (IVF) treatment to single women and
lesbians. The Catholic bishops are asking the country's High Court to
overturn an earlier ruling which granted IVF treatment to single women
in the state of Victoria [see news digests for
31 July and
1 August
2000] but the Women's Electoral Lobby will now intervene to resist the
move. The full hearing is expected to take place in August or
September. [
The Australian, 1 May]
Most new human beings generated by IVF treatment die in the process.
One expert has suggested that only 1.7 percent of IVF conceptions
result in a live birth. [Dr E L Billings, India, August 1999]
A prominent pro-life gynaecologist has lamented the fact that
those with pro-life views are being driven out of obstetrics and
gynaecology as a result of discrimination. Dr Robert L Walley,
professor of obstetrics and gynaecology at Memorial University in St
John's, Newfoundland, Canada, will be among those attending an
international conference on the issue in Rome next month. Dr Walley
said that pro-life doctors in many countries were coming under great
pressure to compromise on their views, and that such a state of affairs
would not be tolerated in any other branch of medicine. [
Zenit, 1 May]
A federal appeals court in the United States has struck down a court
order which had prevented pro-life campaigners in Washington DC from
protesting within 20 feet of abortion clinics. The DC circuit of the US
Court of Appeals agreed that members of the Christian Defense Coalition
had illegally blocked an abortion facility in January 1998, but decided
that the language used by the lower court when it barred the protesters
from all abortion facilities was too broad and violated the
constitutional right of free speech. [
Washington Post, 2 May]
American scientists have extracted stem cells from the bodies of people
who have died. A team led by Fred Gage at the Salk Institute in La
Jolla, California, has reportedly managed to obtain stem cells from
"post mortem samples and surgical specimens". The technique was
reported in the journal
Nature which suggested that it overcame the ethical objections to the destructive use of human embryos as a source of stem cells. [
BBC News online, 2 May;
Metro, 3 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