News, 3 July 2002
The European parliament passed the pro-abortion Van Lancker report
today in Strasbourg by 280 votes to 240, with 28 abstentions. The
report, which was drawn up by the European parliament's women's rights
committee, recommends the legalisation of abortion and the easy
availability of the abortifacient morning-after pill in all EU member
states and applicant countries. MEPs passed an amendment tabled by the
European People's Party which somewhat mitigated the worst elements of
the report by stating that "reproductive health falls within the Member
States' sphere of competence", but other amendments to improve the text
were rejected.
Dominic Baster, SPUC's international secretary, commented: "This is
a sad day for all those who seek a Europe based on respect for human
rights, ethical principles and democracy." Dana Rosemary Scallon, the
pro-life Irish MEP, said: "This has highlighted the agenda of the
women's rights committee, which is willing to trample all over the
principle of subsidiarity, facilitated by the parliament's Council of
Presidents which should never have allowed this report to be authorised
in the first place." [SPUC, 3 July]
Unionists and Nationalists in the Northern Ireland Assembly have agreed
on the need to protect unborn children. In a debate yesterday on the
Commissioner for Young People Bill, Mrs Iris Robinson of the Democratic
Unionist Party insisted that unborn children had rights, and that
therefore "the commissioner's remit should include all children in
Northern Ireland from before birth to the age of 18". A number of other
members agreed, including Dr Joe Hendron of the nationalist SDLP who
said: " I agree with Mrs Iris Robinson about the protection of the
child in utero... after conception a baby is genetically complete.
Nutrition is the only extra thing needed to aid development.... The
whole question of human rights, the rights of the child and the unborn
child and the participation of young children in matters that concern
them are paramount." [
NI Assembly Hansard, 2 July]
American researchers studying the effects of Oregon's Death with
Dignity Act have found that nearly 90% of those who ask for assisted
suicide later change their mind. Dr Susan Tolle, director of the Center
for Ethics in Health Care at Oregon Health and Science University, said
that her team's findings suggested that most patients requesting
assisted suicide were actually afraid of pain among other issues and
needed to be reassured. Oregon is the only American state to have
legalised assisted suicide. [
ABC News, 2 July]
The pro-abortion Irish Family Planning Association (IFPA) has called
for the provision of free aftercare for Irish women who have had
abortions in Britain. The IFPA has recommended to Ireland's Crisis
Pregnancy Agency that a directory of general practitioners and family
planning clinics should be set up where women could receive
non-judgmental care after arriving back from having an abortion in
Britain. [
The Irish Examiner,
3 July] The IFPA is a member of the International Planned Parenthood
Federation (IPPF), the world's largest promoter and provider of
abortions.
Pro-life groups in Western Australia have described the
government's review of the state's four-year-old abortion law as an
"exercise in concealment". The review concluded that there was no need
for legislative changes, although it made 23 recommendations in areas
such as the administration of abortion support. Dr Ted Watt, spokesman
for the Coalition for the Defence of Human Life, complained that the
names of those who had conducted the review had been kept secret, as
had the names of the doctors on the panel which had the power to
authorise abortions after 20 weeks' gestation. [
The West Australian, 1 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