News, 8 July 2002
The British government is to make the RU-486 abortion drug more widely
available in the first nine weeks of pregnancy. The drug, also known as
mifepristone, will be made available free on the National Health
Services at family planning centres to women of all ages - including to
under-age girls without the consent of their parents - in a bid to make
abortion easier and cheaper. Mifepristone, which separates an unborn
child from the lining of his or her mother's womb, is taken in
conjunction with misoprostol, which causes the child to be expelled
from the womb amid much bleeding. A spokesman for the department of
health said: "This is about making sure everyone has access to the same
choices. It is about equality." However, pro-life groups and the
Conservative party, Britain's official opposition, have condemned the
plans. Michael Ancram, deputy Conservative leader, said that "anything
that makes abortion easier and simpler, in the end, is harmful to
people". Paul Tully, SPUC's general secretary, said: "The bottom line
is a dead baby, and that is no easier to come to terms with for the
woman who has thought about it for a fortnight and taken a drug, than
if she has prepared herself for six weeks and had an operation." [
BBC News online, Daily Telegraph, Metro and
SPUC, 8 July]
A white woman, whose partner is also white, has given birth to twins
with black skin after an apparent mix-up at an IVF clinic. A court
hearing has now been scheduled for October to resolve the mecical and
legal issues arising from the apparent error, such as deciding who the
legitimate parents are. [
BBC News online, 8 July]
IVF is now used by about 27,000 couples in the UK every year, although
it entails a hugely disproportionate risk to the lives of the unborn
children conceived in the process.
The Catholic bishops of Slovakia have condemned the pro-abortion
Van Lancker report which was passed by the European parliament last
week. The report recommends the legalisation of abortion and easy
access to the morning-after pill in all European Union members states
and candidate countries, including Slovakia. Marian Gavenda, a
representative of the Slovakian bishops' conference, said that the
adoption of the report "leaves us perplexed, disappointed, and shows
the distance that exists between our expectations and reality". She
continued: "In the agenda of the European union [we] find increasing
space given to ideas and interests that are in open opposition to the
culture of life. We, peoples of Eastern Europe, who have suffered
Communism... do not want to give up our values to enter the European
Union." [
Zenit, 5 July]
The US government has approved the first federally funded research
project involving the use of stem cells extracted from the bodies of
aborted unborn children. The National Institutes of Health quietly
announced on 20 May that a team of researchers led by John Gearhart at
John Hopkins University School of Medicine would receive $150,000 for
work on unborn children aborted up to eight weeks after conception.
Although President Bush announced last year that no federal funding
would be provided for research which involved or benefited from the
deaths of any more embryos, it is reported that a law passed in 1993
meant that he could not extend the scope of this regulation to include
research on aborted foetuses. [
Chicago Tribune, 7 July]
Singapore may be set to become the second country after the UK to
authorise the creation and destruction of cloned human embryos for
research purposes. The country's Bioethics Advisory Committee (BAC) has
recommended that research into so-called therapeutic cloning should be
legalised, although a new statutory board which has been set up to
assume the BAC's responsibilities will have a chance to scrutinise the
proposal. [
Straits Times, 6 July; via Hoover's online]
A delegate to China's parliamentary assembly has warned of sexual
turmoil in the years ahead because so many men would be unable to find
wives as a result of the unbalanced male to female ratio caused by the
one-child family policy. Ren Yuling, a member of the Chinese People's
Political Consultative Conference, observed that there were now 106.7
males to 100 females in the population of 1.3 billion. She said that
among the under-five age group, the ratio was now 120 males to 100
females and, in Guangxi province, it was as high as 140 males to 100
females. [
Sunday Times,
7 July] China's one-child family policy, together with the cultural
preference for male children, has led to high rates of sex-selective
abortion and infanticide of baby girls.
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