News, 18 July 2002
Members of the UK parliament have been told that the government's
strategy to reduce teenage pregnancy rates, including easy access to
the morning-after pill, has failed. Between 1992 and 2000, the number
of under-16s attending family planning clinics in England and Wales
rose by 143.6%. During the same period, prescriptions for the
morning-after pill to under-16s rose by 284.8%, and by 321.5% among 16
to 19-year-olds. However, the official teenage conception rate
remained almost static [and the registered abortion rate rose].
Meanwhile, between 1995 and 2000, cases of sexually transmitted
diseases among 16 to 19-year-old girls rose by 58.3%. The figures were
presented yesterday by Dr David Paton, an economist at Nottingham
University, to the all-party parliamentary pro-life group. [
The
Scotsman, 17 July;
Mirror, 18 July]
Taiwan has accused China of forcing pregnant women with Taiwanese
husbands to have abortions as part of its one-child family policy. The
government in Taipei has urged the Chinese authorities not to apply
its population control policy to Chinese women with Taiwanese husbands
because their children can live in Taiwan. [
ABC News, via Go Asia
Pacific, 18 July]
A discovery by British researchers could lead to the development of
new potentially abortifacient methods of birth control and improve the
efficiency of human cloning. A team led by Professor Tony Lai at the
University of Wales College of Medicine has found a gene in sperm
which produces a protein called PLC-zeta when the sperm has penetrated
the egg. This protein then causes a wave of calcium to surge through
the newly fertilised zygote, causing cell division to begin. It is
reported that the discovery could lead to the development of male
birth control drugs which would block the working of this gene,
thereby preventing cell division after conception. Conversely, the
gene could also be used to make it easier to create embryos for
experimental purposes. [
BBC and
Ananova, 17 July]
As expected, a committee of the British House of Commons has heavily
criticised the UK's Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority [see
digest for 16 July]. A report published today by the House of Commons
science and technology select committee states that "democracy is not
served by unelected quangos taking decisions on behalf of parliament".
Dr Ian Gibson, the committee's chairman, said this morning: "We have
to start rethinking what the word 'life' really means." [
BBC, 18 July]
It has emerged that the pro-abortion group calling itself Catholics
for a Free Choice (CFFC) received more than $10 million dollars from a
variety of prominent pro-abortion foundations between 1996 and 2000.
US tax forms submitted by CFFC show that it received substantial
donations from the Ford Foundation, the Packard Foundation, the
Hewlett Foundation and the Turner Foundation, among others. All five
of CFFC's biggest backers have also supported Planned Parenthood and
the National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League, while
none of them have supported any officially recognised Catholic
organisations. At the end of 2000, CFFC had assets of more than $8
million. [
Insight, 15 July;
LifeSite, 17 July]
The winner of the Miss Oregon beauty pageant last Saturday used her
speech to highlight the link between abortion and breast cancer. Brita
Stream, who will represent her state in the Miss America pageant in
September, defended her actions by saying: "I think the word 'abortion
' often ruffles people's feathers. This is a health issue not a
political one." [
LifeSite, 17 July]
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