News, 14 September 2001
Revised ethical guidelines agreed by the Irish Medical Council on
Wednesday have been welcomed by pro-lifers in Ireland. The council
voted to accept new wording which allows the "termination of pregnancy" when there is "a real and substantial risk to the life of
the mother". However, in so doing, the council adopted a submission
from Ireland's Institute of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists as the
basis for the way in which the wording would be interpreted. This
submission notes that "therapeutic intervention" which entails the
death of a immature unborn child as an unintended secondary effect is
rare, and continues: "We consider that there is a fundamental
difference between abortion carried out with the intention of taking
the life of the baby ... and the unavoidable death of the baby
resulting from essential treatment to protect the life of the mother."
Dr Berry Kiely, a spokesman for the Irish Pro-Life Campaign, said:
"The statement of the Institute represents the consensus position
among the country's obstetricians and gynaecologists and has brought a
greater degree of clarity to the debate." [
Irish Independent and
Pro-Life Campaign, 14 September]
The new leader of Britain's Conservative party has a pro-life voting
record on the issues of cloning and euthanasia, and is reported to be
against abortion. Mr Iain Duncan Smith, who is Roman Catholic, beat Mr
Kenneth Clarke, the former chancellor of the exchequer, by 61 percent
to 39 percent of votes cast by Conservative party members. [
BBC News
online, 13 September;
SPUC parliamentary voting records]
The Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission has recommended that a
proposed bill of rights should enshrine a right to sexual and
reproductive health care and information. The commission's
consultation document, published this month, suggests the inclusion of
the following clause: "Everyone has the right to have equal and free
access to sexual and reproductive health care and to information and
education relating to sexual and reproductive matters at all levels,
free of coercion, discrimination and violence." While the document
states that it would be inappropriate for the issue of abortion to be
"resolved" by the bill of rights, so-called reproductive healthcare is
often used as a euphemism for abortion and could feasibly be taken as
such by the courts. [SPUC, London, 14 September]
Researchers in Florida have claimed that tissue from aborted unborn
children can safely be used to repair brain or spinal cord injuries. A
team led by Dr Douglas K Anderson at the University of Florida in
Gainesville has transplanted small amounts of foetal spinal cord
tissue from aborted babies of between six and nine weeks' gestation
into eight patients with syringomyelia [a disease of the spinal cord
which results in impairment of sensation] since 1997. Dr Anderson
reports that while there has been little noticeable improvement in the
patients, neither have there been any adverse effects. [
Reuters, via
Yahoo! Health, 13 September]
The special session of the United Nations general assembly on children
which was planned to take place from 19 to 21 September has been
postponed on account of the terrorist atrocities on Tuesday. The
general assembly will now decide on a new date for the conference.
Some groups and delegations had hoped to insert pro-abortion language
in the final document of the conference, although this was being
fiercely resisted by others. [United Nations news service, 13
September]
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