News, 22 January 2002
Cardinal Karl Lehmann, president of the German Catholic bishops'
conference, and Manfred Kock, president of Germany's Council of
Evangelical Churches, have written a joint letter to all members of the
German federal legislature in defence of the early human embryo. The
leaders insisted that all human beings had "a right to life and to
unconditional protection from the moment of conception" and that,
therefore, any premise which "only guarantees partial protection to the
embryo in the first stage bases itself only on unstable terrain". [
Zenit, 18 January]
A new Irish pro-life group has announced its intention to take the
Irish Medicines Board (IMB) to court unless it reverses its decision to
authorise the abortifacient morning-after pill within three days.
Ireland for Life, which has been founded by Mrs Mary Thornton, former
chairwoman of Galway for Life, intends to seek a judicial review of the
IMB's decision to reclassify the Levonelle morning-after pill as a
contraceptive. A letter presented to the IMB in Dublin yesterday by the
group's solicitor stated that the morning-after pill caused early
abortions of pre-implantation embryos and therefore contravened both
the Irish constitution and sections 58 and 59 of the Offences Against
the Person Act 1861. Mrs Thornton warned that this could be the last
time such an action was possible in Ireland because "if the forthcoming
abortion referendum is passed, there will be no law vindicating the
right to life of the pre-implantation embryo." [
The Irish Times, 22 January]
The proposed constitutional amendment would define abortion as the
intentional destruction of human life only after implantation and
repeal sections 58 and 59 of the 1861 Act.
Today is the 29th anniversary of the US Supreme Court judgements in the cases of
Roe v Wade and
Doe v Bolton.
Roe v Wade declared a constitutional right to abortion, while
Doe v Bolton
extended this right to all nine months of pregnancy. According to the
judgements, there can be no restriction at all on abortions performed
in the first trimester. States may pass laws to regulate abortion in
the second trimester, but only to ensure a woman's safety and not to
restrict access. States can restrict abortion in the third trimester,
but not in cases where an abortion is considered necessary to protect a
woman's health. In effect, the judgements have led to abortion
virtually on demand throughout pregnancy across the United States.
[SPUC, 22 January; with further
information from the Pro-Life Action League]
US President George Bush proclaimed Sunday 20 January the National
Sanctity of Human Life Day, and issued a statement which affirmed the
inalienable right to life of all human beings. The president wrote:
"Life is an inalienable right, understood as given to each of us by Our
Creator ... we should peacefully commit ourselves to seeking a society
that values life--from its very beginnings to its natural end. Unborn
children should be welcomed in life and protected in law." [
Zenit, 20 January]
A newly published study is the latest to suggest a link between abortion and depression. The study, published in this week's
British Medical Journal
and conducted by the Elliot Institute, Illinois, found that, eight
years after an abortion, married women were 138% more likely to be at
high risk of clinical depression than women who had carried their
unintended first pregnancies to term. Dr David Reardon, director of the
Elliot Institute, said that the results were based on a re-analysis of
figures used by Nancy Russo, a feminist psychologist, who had suggested
that women's self-esteem was not overly affected by an abortion
experience. Dr Reardon added that other studies had also linked
abortion with higher rates of suicide and substance abuse. [
CNS, 22 January]
A committee of medical, legal and religious experts has recommended the
legalisation of passive euthanasia in Israel. The 58 experts, who had
been deliberating for two years, presented a set of recommendations to
Israel's health minister, including the use of legally binding
so-called living wills, respirators with timers which turn themselves
off, and a database in which individuals could record their preferences
for end-of-life care. Active euthanasia would be forbidden. Nissim
Dahan, the health minister, praised the committee's report, which will
now be considered by the Knesset, Israel's parliament. [
The Jerusalem Post, 18 January]
The medical student who complained to police last month that abortions
were being performed illegally in Tasmania has claimed that abortion
practitioners could still face prosecution despite the passing of a new
law to legalise the procedure. Armin Tadj's complaint last month led to
a temporary suspension of abortions in Tasmania and the passing of
emergency legislation to ensure that abortions could be performed
within the law. However, Mr Tadj claims that abortion practitioners are
continuing to practise abortion on demand while falsely stating on
official forms that the abortions are justified on medical grounds.
[CNS, 21 January; via
Pro-Life Infonet]
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