News, 12 February 2002
SPUC's judicial review of the government's decision to make the
morning-after pill available from pharmacists without a prescription
starts this morning in the High Court in London. Speaking on national
radio this morning, John Smeaton, SPUC's national director, said that
the presentation of the morning-after pill as emergency contraception
was a "cynical deception of women". He continued: "We think it is
deliberately promoted as contraception because... if you talk directly
about abortion, women do not like it. What we have is almost entirely
unsupervised abortion by pill." Ann Furedi of the British Pregnancy
Advisory Service, Britain's largest private abortion provider, said
that a victory for SPUC would be "disastrous". The hearing is expected
to conclude tomorrow, although the judgement may be deferred. [SPUC
and
BBC News online, 12 February]
The Irish Catholic bishops appear to have grown more
cautious in their backing for a "yes" vote in the abortion referendum on the sixth of next month. Meeting
at the Marian shrine of Knock, the bishops claimed that the proposal
was "essentially an anti-abortion measure" and stated: "Catholic
voters should feel free in conscience to support this measure, even if
it is viewed as less than might have been desired."
The Irish government has been accused of scaremongering after
Taoiseach Bertie Ahern warned that a "no" vote in the referendum would "open the floodgates to liberalised
abortion". Tony O'Brien, chief executive of the Irish Family Planning
Association, observed: "Ireland has lived with the X case judgement
for 10 years now. The liberal abortion regime which the Taoiseach is
predicting if the referendum is lost has not happened in that time."
[
Irish
Independent, 12 February;
Nando Times, 7 February] Pro-life groups
such as SPUC and Ireland for Life are opposing the proposals because
they would worsen the situation for all unborn children and remove
legal protection from the youngest and most vulnerable
pre-implantation embryos.
An unspecified number of unborn children have been killed in the
course of experiments to create artificial wombs. Scientists in the US
have created prototype wombs made from cells extracted from women's
bodies and have successfully implanted human embryos in the wombs,
although the "experiments had to be terminated" [
i.e. the babies were
killed] after a few days to comply with
in vitro fertilisation (IVF)
regulations. Dr Hung-Ching Liu of Cornell University's Center for
Reproductive Medicine and Infertility explained: "...we took embryos
left over from IVF programmes and put these into our laboratory
engineered tissue. The embryos attached themselves to the walls of our
prototype wombs and began to settle there." The experiments were
halted after six days, but Dr Liu now intends to keep the embryos
alive for up to 14 days to "see if the embryos put down roots and
veins into our artificial wombs' walls, and see if their cells
differentiate into primitive organs and develop a primitive placenta."
[
The Observer, 10 February]
Pope John Paul II has warned against abuses of biotechnology in his
Lenten message. While stressing that the Church was open to scientific
advances which were at the service of humanity, the Pope insisted that
the dignity of the human person could not be infringed. Referring
specifically to the early human embryo, the Pope writes: "The
beginning of life and its marvellous development: this is a gift. And
because it is a gift, life can never be regarded as a possession or as
private property, even if the capabilities we now have to improve the
quality of life can lead us to think that man is the 'master' of life." [
LifeSite, 6 February]
Research in South Australia suggests that pregnant
teenagers are now more likely to have abortions than to give birth
because the option of offering their unplanned child for adoption is
no longer generally considered viable. Figures for 2000 published by
the state's department of human services indicate that 1,093 girls
aged between 15 and 19 had abortions, compared to 802 who gave birth. Kaisu
Vartto, chief executive of the SHine SA family planning group,
commented: "In the 1970s, women were either choosing adoption,
abortion or birth, [but] the rate for adoption has dramatically
declined." [
The Advertiser, South Australia, 11 February]
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