News, 16 August 2002
It has emerged that a Chinese family is hoping to cite China's coercive
abortion policy in an application for asylum in the United States. Mr
Bing Jia and his daughter Yukun are already in the US, but Mrs Hong Jia
is thought to have gone into hiding back in China. Mr Jia and his
daughter claim that Mrs Jia was forced to have two abortions as part of
China's one-child family policy. [
AP, via Yahoo! News, 14 August;
Seattle Times, 15 August]
Scott Weinberg of the Population Research Institute in Virginia says
that asylum has been granted to many people from China in the US since
the mid-1980s. If a woman is fleeing China for fear of the one-child
policy, this is regarded as political persecution and so asylum can be
granted.
An Australian federal senator has described legislation to go
before parliament next week to allow destructive stem cell research on
human embryos as "fatally flawed". Senator Ron Boswell told a public
meeting in Brisbane that embryonic stem-cell researchers had
exaggerated the potential benefits of their work, and that ethical
adult stem cell technology had greater potential for curing diseases.
The bill has the support of John Howard, the prime minister, but it
will be the subject of a conscience vote and John Anderson, the deputy
prime minister, is among those who will vote against. [
Canberra Times and ABC News, 16 August]
A survey has revealed that 25% of Afghan women returning from refugee
camps in Pakistan had been subjected to abortion or sterilisations by
organisations funded by the United Nations. The report, published by
the Population Research Institute, also found that pregnant refugees
were given abortions in the third trimester of pregnancy if their child
was thought to have a developmental anomaly. [
LifeSite, 15 August;
PRI report, 14 August]
Researchers in Australia have found evidence from studying unborn
babies in mid-pregnancy that future disease may be predicted from
earlier signs than previously thought. A team led by Dr Kevin Blake at
the University of Western Australia has published a study in the
Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health which indicates that
babies who have shorter thighs at the 24th week of pregnancy are more
likely to have higher blood pressure when they reach the age of six.
Higher blood pressure is linked to ill health in later life. [
Nando Times, 14 August;
Kaiser Network, 15 August]
Legislators in California are debating a measure which affirms a right
to abortion and also attempts to bind future legislators by forbidding
moves to ban abortion in years to come. The Reproductive Privacy Act,
which has already been passed by the state senate and has the full
support of the pro-abortion governor, is now before the state assembly.
Senator Sheila Kuehl, the bill's sponsor, explained that the law was
necessary to pre-empt a possible future decision by the US Supreme
Court to reverse its 1973 Roe v Wade judgement which would have the
effect of re-validating state restrictions on abortion dating from the
1960s still on the statute book. [
Washington Times and
LifeSite, 15 August]
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