News, 27 August 2002
SPUC has condemned a call by Ms Clare Short, Britain's international
development secretary, for abortion to be declared a human right at
the United Nations Earth Summit now underway in Johannesburg. Peter
Smith, SPUC's delegate at the summit, said: "Clare Short still seems
stuck in the late 1960s with the myth that population control equals
less poverty. As an in-depth study in this week's
Economist has shown,
America's increasingly higher fertility rate will in all likelihood
lead to a younger, more dynamic and prosperous society, whereas
decreasing European fertility partly caused by abortion will mean that
Europe becomes even more the Old World. Abortion is not a human right
but an outdated and unnecessary procedure which is destructive of both
children and society as a whole."
The Liberal Democrats, Britain's third largest political party, have
condemned SPUC for its campaign against the provision of
morning-after pills to young teenage girls from supermarkets. Sandra
Gidley MP, the Liberal Democrats' health spokesman in parliament,
said: "Supporters of this campaign appear to support bringing babies
that may not be wanted into the world. We need a sensible and
practical approach to the rise in teenage pregnancy rates - not
ill-judged campaigns such as this." [
Liberal Democrats, 23 August] John Smeaton, SPUC's national
director, commented: "We thought that responsible politicians had got
beyond the hackneyed dogma that unborn children should be destroyed in
order to make 'every child a wanted child'. The supply of the
abortion-inducing morning-after pill by Sainsbury's and other outlets
devalues early human life and will fail to reduce teenage
pregnancies."
Pro-lifers in the UK have condemned the Medical Research Council for
planning to launch Britain's first national embryonic stem cell bank
on the first anniversary of the September 11th terrorist attacks in
the USA. A spokesman for the ProLife Alliance described the timing as
"insensitive and cynical" because parliament will be in summer recess,
media attention will be focused elsewhere, and there will be no time
to discuss the implications of donor consent, patenting or the
various regulatory processes. However, the spokesman stressed that
these practical concerns were merely distractions because the most
important issue was "the exploitation and loss of early human life"
which would result from a commercial enterprise "which will bring
shame not fame to our nation". [
ProLife Alliance, 25
August]
England's high court will soon be asked to rule on whether UK law
allows a woman to use her frozen IVF embryos to become pregnant even
if the father refuses his consent. Two women who conceived by IVF
before undergoing successful cancer treatment are planning to ask the
high court in London to prevent their embryos from being destroyed at
the behest of the fathers of the embryos. UK law appears to be quite
clear in stipulating that both the father and mother of IVF embryos
must consent to the use of their embryos in fertility treatment or
experimentation. However, Muiris Lyons, a lawyer acting for Nattalie
Evans and Lorraine Hadley will argue that precedents set in other
countries should allow the court to rule that, as in natural
pregnancies, once a man has agreed to give sperm to create a child, it
is then up to the mother to decide whether or not to have the baby.
[
Reuters, 24 August]
Legislation to authorise destructive embryonic stem cell research will
probably not be finalised before the end of the year after it was
referred to a senate committee for further scrutiny. Senator Ron
Boswell referred the bill to the senate's community affairs
legislation committee because be believes that legislators need more
time to consider an issue on which scientists are divided. It is
reported that the referral will mean that Australia's upper house of
parliament will not debate the bill before mid-November. Meanwhile, as
the lower House of Representatives continues to debate the merits of
embryonic research, the leader of the Australian Anglican church has
come out in its favour. Archbishop Peter Carnley of Perth said: "I
think it's ethically possible to have stem cell research and I hope
that if that research goes ahead that we'll make great advances for
medical research." [
CNSNews, via Crosswalk, 26 August;
ABC News, 27
August]
California's state senate has passed another pro-abortion bill, this
time to protect the confidentiality of staff and patients of abortion
clinics. Legislators voted by 23 to 11 in favour of a measure which
would allow doctors, nurses, volunteers and patients of abortion
facilities to enrol in a state privacy programme originally intended
for the victims of domestic violence. The so-called Safe at Home
programme allows its members to conceal their addresses and have their
mail forwarded anonymously. The measure will now return to the state
Assembly, which last week passed another bill to enshrine a right to
abortion. [
AP, via Conta Costa Times, 23 August; see
digest for 21
August]
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