News, 4 February 2002
A 23-year-old lady in Hertfordshire, England, is reported to be
expecting conjoined twins. The two girls, named Natasha and Courtney,
share a heart and a liver. Tina May, the twins' mother, and her fiancé
Dennis Smith, were initially offered an abortion when it was discovered
that they were expecting Siamese twins, but doctors at Queen
Charlotte's and Chelsea Hospital in London believe that one of the
twins could survive an operation to separate the pair. However, both
twins could survive if they were not separated. SPUC has expressed its
sympathy and concern for the twins and for their parents. Paul Tully,
SPUC's general secretary, said: "We fully support the use of the best
surgical and medical skills to help the twins, but we would urge the
doctors to observe the principle that they should not do harm in the
hope that good may come of it. They should not end the life of one twin
for the sake of the other." [
BBC News online and
SPUC media release, 4 February]
The Irish government has announced that the referendum on abortion will
be held on the sixth of next month (a Wednesday). Mr Noel Dempsey, the
Irish minister for the environment, signed the order for the referendum
to take place yesterday, after the high court had rejected a legal
challenge to the poll by two law students in Dublin. Michael McDowell,
the Irish attorney general, said that it was necessary to hold the
referendum before the forthcoming general election because otherwise "a
raft of pro-choice and pro-life candidates would be elected on a single
issue". Fine Gael, Ireland's main opposition party, announced that it
would campaign vigorously against the proposals to amend the
constitution on the basis that they were "so fundamentally flawed and
so uncertain as to make it impossible to predict how the Supreme Court
might interpret their provisions". [
Irish Times and
Irish Independent, 4 February]
Pope John Paul II has called for the legal recognition of human
embryos. Addressing a crowd of several thousand pilgrims yesterday in
St Peter's Square, Vatican City, the Pope said: "...with regard to the
human embryo, science has now demonstrated that it is a human
individual who possesses his own identity from conception. Therefore,
it is logical to exact that this identity be legally recognised, above
all in its fundamental right to life." The Pope also urged greater
legal protection for all vulnerable individuals, including the mentally
handicapped and the terminally ill. [
Zenit, 3 February]
The leaders of Catholics and Evangelical protestants in Germany have
condemned the vote in the German parliament to authorise imports of
embryonic stem cells. Cardinal Karl Lehmann, president of the German
episcopal conference, and Manfred Kock, president of the Council of
German Evangelical Churches, issued a joint statement pointing out that
the imported stem cells would have been extracted from embryos who had
been killed as a result, and that there was a great danger to the right
to life when the "total protection of man from the moment of
fertilisation" was compromised. Cardinal Joachim Meisner, archbishop of
Cologne, said that "every means of the state of law should be used to
revoke this fatal decision". [
Zenit, 1 February]
The 2001 Indian census has revealed that there are now 933 females for
every 1,000 males in the population. Many have blamed the alarming
inbalance on illegal use of ultrasound to determine the sex of unborn
children and sex-selective abortions. The census report observes that
there are "20-25 million missing women in India". [
The Seattle Times, 2 February]
The Roman Catholic bishops of Mexico have condemned the decision of
their country's supreme court to authorise the abortion of unborn
children with genetic anomalies. Bishop Abelardo Alvarado, secretary
general of the Mexican bishops' conference, said that the legalisation
of abortion in any circumstances constituted a "death culture that
conflicts with the roots of the Mexican people". The bishop also said
that the toleration of abortion would lead to a rise in other forms of
violence, such as kidnappings, murders and robberies. [
The News Mexico, 2 February]
It is reported that the government of China is unhappy with US
President George Bush for his decision to withhold funds from the
United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) on the basis that it supports
China's coercive population control programme. A spokesman for the
Chinese foreign ministry rejected claims that the UNFPA supported
forced abortions in China and said that the allegations were
"unfavourable for international co-operation in population control".
The row is threatening to cloud Mr Bush's planned visit to China later
this month. [
Telegraph online, 3 February]
It has been claimed that some female athletes get pregnant and have
abortions to boost their performance, a procedure previously reported
to have been imposed on Soviet gymnasts in the 1970s. Celeste McGovern,
a columnist for
Report
magazine, has claimed that athletes are turning to the technique
because testing for performance-enhancing drugs is now routine.
Professor Poul-Erik Paulev of the university of Copenhagen, Denmark,
observes in a textbook obtained by LifeSite: "...in some countries
female athletes have become pregnant for 2-3 months in order to improve
their performance just after the abortion." [
LifeSite, 1 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