News, 27 September 2001
The government of Estonia has proposed legislation to allow under-age
girls to obtain abortions without parental consent. The social
ministry explained that the proposal was based on an assumption that a
girl who was capable of becoming pregnant would also be capable of
making her own decisions. The amendment will now be put before the
Estonian parliament. [AFP, 25 September; via Pro-Life E-News] In 1996,
56 percent of known pregnancies in Estonia were ended by abortion.
Poland's new left-wing government confirmed yesterday that it intends
to liberalise the country's abortion law. The largest bloc of seats in
last Sunday's general election was won by the ex-communist Democratic
Left Alliance (SLD) in coalition with the smaller Labour Union party
(UP). Marek Pol, leader of the Labour Union party, said: "We believe
abortions should be allowed when the woman faces hardship." Reports
suggest that any vote on abortion in the Polish parliament could be
very close because the SLD-UP coalition is about 10 seats short of an
overall majority and most other parties generally oppose abortion.
[Reuters, 26 September; via
Pro-Life Infonet]
The European Union's commissioner for research has stressed that no EU
research programmes will involve the creation of human embryos for
research purposes. Addressing experts attending a meeting in Brussels
organised by the European Commission's directorate general for
research, Philippe Busquin said: "I want to make clear that European
research programmes do not and will not fund research on embryonic
stem cells that involves the creation of an embryo for research
purposes." However, participants at the meeting appear to have agreed
that stem cell research should continue on aborted foetuses and on IVF
embryos created for fertility treatment but who are surplus to
requirements. [
ENS, 16 September]
A 14-year-old girl who suffered brain damage at birth after medical
staff had failed to remove her mother's intra-uterine device has been
awarded 2.62 million pounds in compensation. Caterina Ziccardi was
left with cerebral palsy after the blunder at the Royal
Buckinghamshire Hospital in Aylesbury, England. [Ananova, 25
September] The IUD, or coil, is thought to work primarily by
preventing successful implantation of an unborn child in his or her
mother's womb.
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