News, 10 June 2002
Pro-lifers in Northern Ireland have expressed concern that a conference
centre run by a Catholic religious order hosted a pro-abortion meeting
over the weekend. Mrs Betty Gibson, chairman of SPUC Northern Ireland,
has written to Fr Patrick Ryall OSM, prior provincial of the Servite
order in Britain and Ireland, to stress her disappointment with the
decision of Benburb Priory to host the Women's Information Group
conference. A workshop at the conference was led by Georgie McCormack
of the pro-abortion Family Planning Association (FPA), and Audrey
Simpson, director of FPA Northern Ireland, was also present at the
conference. Mrs Gibson wrote: "The fact that a representative of a
notoriously pro-abortion, anti-Catholic organisation was allowed to
lead a workshop on Catholic premises, even as her organisation fought
the Catholic Church in the courts, is intolerable." [
SPUC, 10 June; also see
news digest for 5 June]
Dana Rosemary Scallon, an Irish pro-life member of the European
parliament, has claimed that the European Union is putting pressure on
the Irish government to support funding for embryo research. Dana said
that people at the highest level in the government of Taoiseach Bertie
Ahern had been pushed to accept EU funding for such research, despite
the fact that it is prohibited by the Irish constitution. Dana observed
that it was against EU law to fund research which was illegal in any
member state, and she urged the Irish government to take any
opportunity in the coming weeks to block EU funding of embryonic
research. [
online.ie, 6 June]
A US federal judge has ruled that military health insurance must cover
abortion in cases of anencephaly (when a baby develops without a
brain). At present, military health insurance schemes are prevented by
law from covering abortion except when there is a direct threat to the
mother's life. District Judge Nancy Gertnet, sitting in Boston,
criticised the application of this rule in the case of Maureen Britell
who had an abortion in 1994 after discovering that her child had no
brain or cranium but was denied insurance coverage. Judge Gertnet said
that forcing Mrs Britell to keep her child would have caused
"unimaginable emotional pain" and described the decision to deny her
funding as "irrational" and "cruel". It is expected that the Bush
administration will appeal the judgement. [
Women's E-News, 6 June]
The Roman Catholic bishops of Switzerland have condemned euthanasia as
"murder on demand". A document on care for terminally ill patients
published by the Swiss episcopal conference last Thursday distinguished
between "direct active euthanasia", which is never licit, and
acceptable practices such as the "interruption of disproportionate
medical procedures" and the provision of painkillers to alleviate
suffering which may shorten life "as something inevitable" rather than
as an intention. [
Zenit, 7 June]
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