News, 7 August 2002
SPUC has expressed sympathy and condolences to the British prime
minister and his wife after their unborn child died in a miscarriage.
It is understood that Mrs Cherie Blair, who is 47, had known that she
was pregnant. She is now recovering at Chequers, the prime minister's
official country residence. [
BBC News online and SPUC, 7 August]
A doctor is being questioned by police in Egypt on suspicion of
performing illegal abortions after his employees found the bodies of 16
foetuses in his refuse. Dr Abdel Mohsen Ibrahim, aged 58, claims that
he obtained the foetuses legally for the purposes of scientific
research, but the police doubt that he needed them for this because he
is an osteopath. [AFP, 6 August; via Pro-Life E-News] Abortion is only
permitted in Egypt to save the mother's life.
Tanya Meyers, the American woman who was prevented from having an
abortion last week after her ex-boyfriend obtained an injunction,
suffered a miscarriage hours after another judge dissolved the
injunction on Monday. John Stachokus, the unborn child's father, had
signalled his intention to mount an appeal against the judge's decision
to allow the abortion to proceed. [
Philadelphia Inquirer, 6 August;
Seattle Times online, 7 August]
Scientists in Sydney, Australia, have revealed that they are already
using aborted foetuses in research. Claims by Professor Alan Trounson
that government legislation to regulate destructive embryonic stem cell
research will lead to the use of tissue from aborted babies has caused
controversy in Australia [see
Monday's and
yesterday's
digests]. However, Professor Bernie Tuch, director of the pancreas
transplant unit at the Prince of Wales hospital in Sydney, has now
revealed that his team began to use human foetuses in the culture of
embryonic stem cells several months ago. It is reported that Australian
researchers have been using human foetal tissue for decades. [
Sydney Morning Herald, 7 August]
A study published in Thailand has recommended the legalisation of
abortion on the basis that 45% of women who seek [illegal] abortions do
so for lack of money. However, pro-life feminists have suggested that
the solution is not the legalisation of abortion but, rather, the
provision of basic resources for women. Serrin Foster, president of
Feminists for Life, commented: "Financial issues are health issues, and
education issues are life and death issues. The question is, do we
believe women deserve better? Or will abortion advocates settle for the
status quo?" [Bangkok Post, 1 August; via
Pro-Life Infonet]
The leader of the Knights of Columbus, the largest Catholic lay
organisation in the United States, has urged all Catholics to vote
pro-life in this year's congressional elections. Supreme Knight Carl A
Anderson, who is also a member of the Pontifical Academy for Life, told
the organisation's annual meeting in California that Catholics had a
duty to elect a senate that would confirm federal judges and Supreme
Court justices who would then overturn Roe v Wade - the 1973 US Supreme
Court decision that declared a constitutional right to abortion. [
Pro-Life Infonet, 6 August]
A community health plan in California is to pay the consultation fees
charged by pharmacists when they provide the abortifacient
morning-after pill in a bid to increase use of the drug. The San
Francisco Health Plan, which receives state funding, will provide the
$20 consultation fee in addition to the $30 charge for the pills
themselves. The morning-after pill is available from pharmacists
without the need for a prescription in California. [
The Examiner, 7 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