News, 17 December 2002
An Italian public prosecutor has opened an investigation into plans to
test the RU-486 abortion drug regimen at the Sant'Anna hospital in
Turin. Italy is one of the few European countries not to have licensed
RU-486, and news of plans to test the drug on 400 women in Turin met
with widespread condemnation earlier this year [see digest for
30 October].
Prosecutor Raffaele Guariniello is now examining whether the protocol
authorising the trial to proceed contravenes Italian law which requires
that abortions are performed in a hospital or health clinic. Abortion
has been legal in Italy since 1978 and was backed in a referendum in
1981. More abortions are performed at the Sant'Anna hospital than
anywhere else in the country. [
Reuters, 16 December]
American and Asian pro-life groups have applauded the firm stance
against abortion being adopted by the US delegation at the UN Asian and
Pacific population conference in Thailand. Andrew Kong of Celebration
of Life in Singapore said: "It is good to see a large and powerful
nation like the US exercising moral leadership in these times when the
world is blinded by a materialistic and hedonistic culture of death."
Meanwhile, Scott Weinberg at the Population Research Institute in the
US said that the US delegation had been "courageous and heroic" in the
face of the international pro-abortion community. [
CNS News and
Crosswalk, 17 December]
New Jersey's state senate has passed a bill to promote destructive
embryonic stem cell research. The legislation promotes research on
unused IVF embryos as well as on cloned embryos. Marie Tasy of New
Jersey Right to Life condemned the legislators for acting
"irresponsibly to create a foul climate where ghoulish human
experimentation and organ harvesting will be performed and human embryo
and foetal farms will flourish throughout our state". [NJRL, 16
December; via
Pro-Life Infonet]
California is the only state to have passed a law to promote stem cell
research on embryos, but legislators in Ohio, Virginia, Wisconsin and
Massachusetts, as well as in New Jersey, are considering similar
measures in direct contradiction of the US federal government's policy.
A Canadian government-backed bill to regulate in vitro
fertilisation (IVF) and destructive research on human embryos has been
passed by the House of Commons health committee. The committee amended
the assisted reproduction bill to ensure that IVF treatment would be
available to all women, regardless of sexual orientation or marital
status. The full House of Commons will now debate the bill at the third
and final reading after it reconvenes in February, and several more
amendments are expected to be tabled. [
LifeSite, 16 December]
A study published by a pro-abortion institute which claims that use of
the abortifacient morning-after pill has prevented thousands of
unwanted pregnancies has received widespread media coverage in the US.
The pro-abortion Alan Guttmacher Institute claims that morning-after
pills prevented as many as 51,000 pregnancies in 2000 and may have
accounted for as much as 43% of the decline in the number of recorded
abortions between 1994 and 2000. Pro-lifers have pointed out that the
morning-after pill causes rather than averts abortions because it can
work by preventing the implantation of a newly conceived embryo in his
or her mother's womb. [
USA Today and
Knight Ridder Newspapers, 16 December]
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