News, 8 February 2002
The director of an abortion clinic in Britain's second largest city has
admitted that "there are potential health risks with any abortion
operation." Tracey Allsopp, the manager of Birmingham's Calthorpe
Clinic, also admitted that women made repeat visits to her clinic for
abortions despite being given advice on contraception by the clinic.
SPUC general secretary Paul Tully commented: "These admissions confirm
the concerns that we have been raising for decades, namely that
abortion is medically unsafe and that the Abortion Act would be
circumvented to provide abortion as a form of birth control. At the
very least, the Abortion Act must be tightened to stop this flouting of
the law." [
Sunday Mercury, 12 February]
Latest financial accounts for Comic Relief, the high-profile British
charity which runs the Red Nose Day appeal, show that, in the 12 months
to June 2000, £51,953 was paid to Marie Stopes International, the
abortion provider, for projects in Africa. John Smeaton, SPUC national
director, commented: "Anyone with a conscience would not support Comic
Relief if they knew their money was being used to kill unborn children.
Any idea that some funds [donated to Comic Relief] are completely
separate from the abortion aspect is completely misguided and
completely naïve." [
Catholic Herald, 8 February]
A leading British pro-life group has predicted that a British
parliamentary committee will produce "relentlessly biased"
recommendations on stem cell research. Josephine Quintavalle, spokesman
for Comment on Reproductive Ethics, condemned an inquiry by the House
of Lords select committee on stem cell research as "an exercise in
futility, aimed at reassuring the public that every due consideration
had been taken on board." Mrs Quintavalle also condemned the
composition of the committee, saying: "My contention is that if you get
26 people knee-deep in embryonic stem cell research then you are not
going to get an objective view." [
Catholic Herald, 8 February].
A conference of doctors and surgeons has urged that human embryos be afforded the same rights as other patients. In
The Embryo As Patient,
a joint manifesto, 200 doctors and surgeons at the conference held at
Rome's La Sapienza university described the human embryo as "a totally
human individual" and promised "to foster interdisciplinary research so
that the embryo will be known and welcomed in its inviolable dignity."
Attending the conference, Professor Domenico Arduini, gynaecologist of
the public University of Tor Vergata, commented: "It is interesting to
note that, in treating the embryo as a patient, the woman also receives
considerable benefits." [
Zenit, 4 February].
A study published in the
Lancet British medical journal has found that children conceived through
in-vitro
fertilisation (IVF) techniques were about three times more likely to
have cerebral palsy than naturally-conceived children. Doctors in
Sweden compared the incidence rate of neurological problems in 5,680
children born after IVF and 11,360 children conceived naturally. Dr Bo
Stromberg of Uppsala University Children's Hospital, who led the study,
said that the phenomenon was largely due to health problems associated
with multiple pregnancies and recommended that only one embryo should
be implanted in the mother's womb. [
Ananova, 8 February]
Chinese police are investigating the dumping of six dead foetuses and
two dead new-born babies in a drain in eastern China's Anhui province.
It is believed that the bodies came from a nearby hospital. [
Ananova,
25 January] The Chinese government's coercive one-child policy,
supported by British-funded population control organisations, involves
forced abortions and infanticide.
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