News, 25 October 2001
The Irish government's plan to hold a new referendum on abortion
before the general election in June have been dealt a blow by the
Fine Gael opposition party. Fine Gael is to move a set of amendments
to the bill which would permit the referendum to go ahead, and this
could postpone the bill's second reading for three months. The Irish
Labour party, Ireland's second largest opposition party, has already
announced its opposition to the referendum. [Ananova, 25 October]
Official figures have indicated that there were 89 abortions performed
in Guernsey last year, and a further 25 abortions performed on
Guernsey residents in England. This equates to an abortion rate of 177
per 1,000 live births, compared to 227 per 1,000 live births in
England and Wales. The local board of health defended the figures by
claiming that the number of abortions performed on Guernsey residents
had not risen since the legalisation of abortion there in 1997, but
pro-lifers pointed out that the figures were not reliable because they
depended on accurate information being supplied by women who had
abortions outside the bailiwick. [Channel Islands Right to Life, 24
October]
A fertility clinic in Sheffield, England, is offering free
in vitro
fertilisation (IVF) treatment to women in return for egg donations.
The so-called egg-sharing initiative at the Sheffield Fertility Centre
aims to help those who cannot afford the minimum cost of £1,500
for treatment. Paul Tully, general secretary of SPUC,
commented: "This will create pressure on women who would not choose,
or could not afford IVF, to go in for it. Many women don't want to
think that someone else is bearing their (genetic) baby, or that their
embryonic children are being used as guinea-pigs: this is what
'egg-sharing' means. The pressures on childless women will force some
to contemplate the unthinkable." [
BBC News online, 23 October; SPUC]
The vast majority of unborn children created in IVF treatment die
during the process.
A survey has found that at least 84 unborn children, and possibly many
more, were aborted at or after 24 weeks' gestation in Australia during
the past three years. The survey of doctors who specialise in
ultrasound testing also found that 64% of respondents would be
willing to perform late abortions on the basis of foetal abnormality,
and 16% of these would also be willing to perform late
abortions for any reason. Dr Nicholas Tonti-Filippini, an independent
ethics consultant, observed that the findings showed that abortionists
were practising "reproductive discrimination" in deciding who should
live and who should die. [
The Age, 25 October]
Ms Geri Halliwell, a former member of the Spice Girls and now a goodwill
ambassador for the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), will today
launch a website for children under 16 which promotes abortion. The
UNFPA assigned the singer to work for Marie Stopes International
(MSI), an abortion provider based in London. In a press release, MSI
confirmed that the website, which accuses pro-life groups of failing
to provide "unbiased or objective information", is aimed at 11 to 15-year-olds. [
LifeSite, 24 October]
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