News, 23 July 2002
Pro-lifers in the UK are delighted that a life-member of the Society
for the Protection of Unborn Children (SPUC) has been chosen as the
next archbishop of Canterbury. It was announced today that Tony Blair,
the British prime minister, had recommended Dr Rowan Williams,
currently the Anglican archbishop of Wales, to Queen Elizabeth II as
the next archbishop of Canterbury and figurehead of the worldwide
Anglican communion.
John Smeaton, national director of SPUC, said: "The Archbishop has
been a life member of SPUC for many years; we are delighted to see
that someone of such positive pro-life views has been recommended for
the most senior position in the Church of England; the example he
gives of Christian witness to the sanctity of human life whether
unborn or born will inspire other Anglicans throughout the world to
recognise that society must foster a loving and supportive environment
for the weakest and most vulnerable of the human race. The recognition
that human life begins at conception is the only sure foundation for
the respect for human life at any age that was so wanting in so much
of the 20th century. Dr Williams' appointment may be part of a new
beginning in the 21st century." [SPUC and BBC, 23 July]
It has been confirmed that the US administration of President Bush has
decided to block federal funding of the pro-abortion United Nations
Population Fund (UNFPA). It was announced yesterday that US money for
family planning and reproductive health (including $34 million already
allocated for this purpose by the US Congress) will be spent through
the US Agency for International Development (USAID) rather than
through the UNFPA after the White House concluded that the UNFPA
funded coercive abortion programmes in China. The UN and Chinese
government officials have criticised the decision, but pro-lifers have
welcomed it. Anthony Ozimic, political secretary of SPUC in the UK,
applauded the decision and called on member states of the European
Union to give serious consideration to following the American lead. Mr
Ozimic added: "The days of international population control are
numbered. The world is beginning to recognise the looming threat of
under-population which has been created by an anti-child mentality."
[
State Department Daily Briefing, 22 July,
BBC, 23 July and
SPUC]
The Roman Catholic bishops of six countries in central Africa have
urged their societies to treat women as the equals of men by
prohibiting practices which serve to exploit women, such as abortion.
The bishops of Gabon, Cameroon, Chad, Equatorial Guinea, Congo and the
Central African Republic denounced discrimination against women and
"serious hindrances still blocking the promotion [of women] and their
potential" at their tri-annual conference in Gabon.. They cited
abortion, genital mutilation, forced marriages and other exploitative
practices as examples of the ways in which prejudice against women was
manifested. [
News24, 23 July]
Canada's leading pro-life organisation has called for an abortion
moratorium during Pope John Paul II's visit to the country this week
for the World Youth Day in Toronto. Jim Hughes, national president of
Campaign Life Coalition, said: "We are calling on every hospital and
abortion facility in Canada and particularly in Toronto to hold a
life-affirming moratorium on abortion during this visit by the Holy
Father ... This man, who embodies the ideals society so desperately
desires, stands firm against any attacks on human life in every stage
of development." [
LifeSite, 22 July]
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