News, 2 July 2002
The Catholic bishops of Malta, a strongly pro-life country which is
seeking full membership of the European Union, have condemned
pro-abortion language in the Van Lancker report. In its present form,
the report recommends the legalisation of abortion in all EU member
states and candidate countries. It is expected that members of the
European parliament will vote on the report tomorrow at noon. A
statement released by the Maltese bishops reads: "The Catholic Church,
that defends the life of man from its inception, condemns abortion with
all its might and without any exceptions. Hence, we the bishops urge
all the members of the Church in Malta to join us in our prayers so
that the Lord helps the members of the European parliament in voting
against the proposal that stands for their approval." [
Malta Media, 26 June]
The government of the Netherlands has granted a licence to a
controversial floating abortion clinic. The Women on Waves Foundation,
headed by Rebecca Gomperts, a prominent Dutch abortionist, will be
allowed to provide the RU-486 abortion drug to kill unborn children of
up to six weeks' gestation on the Aurora. Els Borst, the Dutch health
minister, said that the decision was in line with government policy of
promoting women's sexual independence. The Women on Waves foundation,
which aims to offer abortions to women in countries with pro-life laws,
will now seek further approval to carry out abortions up to three
months into pregnancy. The Aurora docked in Ireland last year amid
great publicity, but could not offer abortions at that time because it
lacked a Dutch licence. [
BBC News online and
The Guardian, 2 July]
The abortifacient morning-after pill became available in Australia for
the first time yesterday. The Postinor-2 morning-after pill will only
be available on prescription, and Schering, its distributor, has stated
that it has no intention of applying for its reclassification in
Australia as a drug available from pharmacists. In marked contrast to
its stated position in the UK, a Schering spokesman in Australia said:
"It is only to be used as an emergency contraceptive and one of the
reasons it is available on prescription only is so doctors can regulate
how patients use it." Previously, doctors in Australia had prescribed
multiple doses of the conventional contraceptive pill to serve the
purpose of so-called emergency contraception. [
The Australian, 1 July; SPUC]
Fertility researchers have suggested that women who suffer repeated and
unexplained miscarriages could have a better chance of keeping their
unborn child if they resorted to in vitro fertilisation (IVF) and
pre-implantation genetic diagnosis (PGD). Carmen Rubio of the Instituto
Valenciano de Infertilidad in Valencia, Spain, told the annual
conference of the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology
in Vienna that non-inherited chromosomal anomalies were a common cause
of miscarriage, but that embryos with such anomalies could be screened
out by using PGD. She said that "only the normal embryos" would be
transferred into the woman, increasing the chances of successful
implantation. [
BBC News online, 1 July] Those embryos found to be "abnormal" would be destroyed.
A tribal chief in Nigeria, western Africa, has condemned the
introduction of sex education into schools, which he sees as a tactical
way of legalising abortion. Chief Okunbowu Akpata of the Kingdom of
Benin, now in southern Nigeria, practises traditional religion but sees
opposition to abortion as a concern he shares in common with Christians
and Muslims. He said: "No religion will ever tolerate this ... These
things we are talking of are inimical to our culture and I am sure
nobody will agree to it." [
AllAfrica.com, via Northern Light, 1 July; etc.]
A law which extends the scope of homicide to unborn children from the
moment of conception came into effect in Idaho yesterday. The measure,
known as Noah's Law after a unborn baby named Noah who was killed when
his 16-year-old mother was violently attacked, extends the crimes of
murder, manslaughter and aggravated battery to all unborn children -
including embryos and zygotes. [
The Spokesman-Review, 30 June]
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