News, 21 September 2001
Health chiefs in Scotland have admitted that there is no evidence to
suggest that easier access to the abortifacient morning-after pill
will actually reduce the number of unwanted pregnancies. Alison
Strath, general secretary of the Royal College of Pharmacists in
Scotland, said: "We don't know if this reduces teenage pregnancies,
but other pilot schemes have shown that women like the pharmacist as a
point of access for emergency contraception, and that it should
therefore be freely available." Scottish doctors who are opposed to
easier access to the morning-after pill have called on the Scottish
Executive instead to tackle the root causes of teenage pregnancies and
abortions. Dr Anne Williams, a general practitioner in Glasgow, said:
"Instead of spending three million pounds on [this] project, it is
time the government tried to tackle the core problems of deprivation
which are behind the high rates of unwanted pregnancies." [
Scottish
Daily Mail, 18 September] The 1990s saw a five-fold increase in
prescriptions for the morning-after pill in the UK, yet overall the
rate of abortion rose.
The pro-abortion United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) has signed
deals with the governments of Pakistan and Nicaragua. On Tuesday, the
UNFPA signed a deal with Pakistan worth nearly three and a half
million dollars for the "enforcement of activities to provide relevant
information about family planning services". A separate deal with the
Nicaraguan human rights defence office entails a series of programmes
to promote the so-called reproductive rights of women, children and
adolescents. There are restrictive abortion laws in both Pakistan and
Nicaragua. [
LifeSite, 20 September]
A US federal judge has blocked the enforcement of Ohio's ban on
partial-birth abortions, also known as dilation and extraction. Citing
last year's US supreme court decision which overturned Nebraska's
partial-birth abortion ban, US district judge Walter Rice said that
the law was unconstitutional because it would not allow a doctor to
perform the procedure when it may be safer for some patients. A
spokesman for Ohio Right to Life insisted that there was no credible
evidence that dilation and extraction would ever be safer than other
abortion methods. [
Las Vegas Sun, 20 September]
The Roman Catholic Church in Poland has reportedly expressed concern
that the former Communists could liberalise abortion law in the
country if they win Sunday's elections. Opinion polls indicate that
the ex-Communists are set to take power from the current
Solidarity-led government. [
AP, via Northern Light, 21 September]
A man in the American state of New York has been charged with
second-degree abortion for the killing of an unborn child of less than
10 weeks' gestation. Clayton R Tucker Jr., aged 25, is accused of
punching and kicking a pregnant woman in her midriff with the result
that she miscarried the following day. State law stipulates that a
person is guilty of second-degree abortion if he or she commits an
abortive act against a female who is less than 24 weeks pregnant
unless it is "justifiable" and done with a physician's consent. Mr
Tucker could face up to four years in prison if convicted. [
Press
Republican Online, 20 September]
An American Episcopalian woman priest has spoken out against attempts
to pass the Child Custody Protection Act which would criminalise her
pro-abortion work. Rev Katherine Ragsdale has dedicated herself to
transporting underage girls to states where they can receive abortions
without parental consent. She has vowed to continue her work, which
she describes as "God's calling". [
AgapePress/IFRL Daily News, 19
September]
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