News, 13 September 2001
Clinics run by Britain's largest private abortion provider in London
sent 700 women home after they had taken abortion drugs last year. A
conference on abortion organised by the British Pregnancy Advisory
Service (BPAS) heard yesterday that the women were given the RU-486
abortion drug at the clinics. After two days they returned to the
clinic to be given misoprostol, a drug which is used to expel the
aborted child from the woman's body. They were then sent home to
miscarry in their own homes as part of a so-called 'bedroom abortion'
trial scheme. Peter Garrett of the Life charity questioned whether the
BPAS had already broken the law by operating the scheme, while Paul
Tully, general secretary of SPUC, observed that the introduction of
"home-alone abortion" revealed the poor level of care given to women
at abortion clinics. Mr Tully also warned that pro-abortionists were
promoting the use of RU-486 in the developing world where its
side-effects, such as haemorrhage, were potentially fatal. [
Daily Mail
and
SPUC media release, 13 September]
An official body of the United Nations has explicitly demanded that
Nepal legalise abortion. A report on Nepal prepared by the Committee
on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR) states: "The Committee
urges the State party to take remedial action to address the problems
of clandestine abortions, unwanted pregnancies and the high rate of
maternal mortality. In this regard, the Committee urges the State
party to reinforce reproductive and sexual health programmes, in
particular in rural areas, and to allow abortion when pregnancies are
life threatening or a result of rape or incest." The CESCR has made
its demand despite the fact that the International Covenant on
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, which the CESCR was set up to
review, does not include any mention of abortion or so-called
reproductive health services. [
LifeSite, 12 September]
An official report has blamed the so-called millennium bug for the
fact that 150 women were incorrectly informed last year that their
unborn children were at low risk of having Down's syndrome. The
112-page report on the error at the Northern General Hospital in
Sheffield, England, was commissioned by Professor Lindsey Davies,
regional director of public health. Professor Davies revealed that as
a result of the computer software error, four women later gave birth
to Down's syndrome babies [instead of having them aborted]. [
Ananova,
13 September]
The Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research (MJFF) has
offered 2.2 million dollars towards stem cell research. The
Foundation, which was founded last year by the American actor who
himself has Parkinson's disease, has said that recipients may use the
aid on all viable cells, including those extracted from human embryos.
As a private organisation, the MJFF is not bound by US federal
restrictions on the funding of research using cells extracted in the
future from aborted foetuses or embryos. [
Reuters, via Yahoo! News, 10
September]
Alanis Morissette, the American musician, will be headlining a
Voters for Choice benefit concert in Washington DC on 25 September.
The event will raise money to support pro-abortion political
candidates. [
LAUNCH media news, 10 September]
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