News, 2 January 2002
Active euthanasia became legal in the Netherlands yesterday. The law
to legalise euthanasia was passed by the Dutch parliament last April
and it took effect yesterday (1 January). Pro-euthanasia organisations
in the UK claim to have received dozens of enquiries from people
wishing to take advantage of the Dutch law, although Walburg de Jong
of the Dutch Euthanasia Organisation said that euthanasia was only
available to Dutch residents who had developed a relationship with
their family doctor. [
BBC, 1 January;
Times, 2 January]
Only 12% of people in the Irish Republic support abortion "without
restriction", according to an opinion poll commissioned by the Irish
Independent. 28% of respondents would accept abortion in cases of
incest, while 34% would accept abortion in cases of rape. The Irish
Independent reported conflicting figures on what proportion thought a
threat of suicide justified abortion. [
Irish Independent, 31 December]
Legislators in China have voted to codify the country's 21-year-old
coercive population control policy. The law was adopted last Saturday
at the 25th session of the standing committee of the National People's
Congress. The policy limits urban families to one child, but allows
rural families to have a second child if their first child is a girl.
As a result of the policy, and widespread use of sex-selective
abortion and female infanticide, there are now said to be 117 boys to
every 100 girls in China. The policy also entails coerced abortion and
widespread use of abortifacient chemicals and devices. [AFP, 30
December; via
Pro-Life Infonet]
A law which came into effect in Illinois yesterday requires all
hospitals to inform rape victims about so-called emergency
contraception. Catholic hospitals will not have to provide the drugs
but the law does seek to force Catholic hospitals to tell rape victims
where to get them. [
Chicago Sun-Times, 31 December]
A columnist in the Scotsman newspaper, who is a former Lord Provost of
Glasgow, has lambasted Britain's abortion laws in his new year column.
Mr Michael Kelly criticised the "cruel attitude" of women who have
abortions when they find themselves "inconveniently pregnant", and
questioned whether a society in which many women "are not prepared to
make even the small sacrifice of allowing their child the chance of
life" could call itself civilised. [
The Scotsman, 1 January]
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